LA 

— 

,Q ^5- I DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR 
M BUREAU OF EDUCATION 

BULLETIN, 1918. No. 30 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS 

of 

COLLEGES OF ARTS AND SCIENCES 



REPORT OF A COMMITTEE 
REPRESENTING THE ASSOCIATIONS OF 
HIGHER EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS 



Prepared by 

SAMUEL PAUL CAPEN 

SECRETARY 





WASHINGTON 

GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 

1918 




Glass Lf\ 2.VS 
Book ■ 0*35 



DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR 

BUREAU OF EDUCATION 



BULLETIN, 1918, No. 30 



>A3 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS 

of 

COLLEGES OF ARTS AND SCIENCES 



REPORT OF A COMMITTEE 
REPRESENTING THE ASSOCIATIONS OF 
HIGHER EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS 



Prepared by 

SAMUEL PAUL CAPEN 

SECRETARY 




WASHINGTON 

GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 

1918 




03 



'; 



ADDITIONAL COPIES 

OF THIS PUBLICATION MAY BE PROCURED FROM 

THE SUPERINTENDENT OF DOCUMENTS 

GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 

"WASHINGTON, D. C. 

AT 

10 CENTS PER COPY 



o, of ». 

FEB 14 |919 



CONTENTS. 



Page. 

Letter of transmittal 5 

Members of the committee on higher educational statistics 7 

A critical study of college and university resources 7 

Special inquiry to colleges of arts and sciences 8 

Subcommittee on definition of college standards . 14 

Suggested requirements for a successful college of arts and sciences 15 

Table 1. — Colleges of arts and sciences — Part I: Professors and instructors 18 

Table 1. — Colleges of arts and sciences — Part II: Students, expenditures, and 

receipts 31 

Financial foundation 44 

Table 2. — Productive endowment, income, and debt 44 

Table 3. — Income and amount spent for salaries of college teachers 48 

Number of departments 51 

Table 4. — Institutions having 11 specified departments or fewer 52 

Size of faculty 53 

Table 5. — Number of faculty members devoting full time to college instruc- 
tion — Number of college students 54 

Separation of college and preparatory department 57 

Table 6. — Number of faculty members giving part time to preparatory work. . 58 

Advanced degrees of faculty members 59 

Table 7. — Number of faculty members holding bachelor's degree, master's 

degree, and doctor's degree (excluding honorary degrees) 60 

Table 8. — Number of teaching hours of faculty members 64 

Table 9. — Requirements for admission and graduation 68 

Table 10. — Expenditures for library and laboratories 70 

Relative size of freshman class 72 

Table 11. — Faculty, college students, and number of high-school graduates 

entering in 1915 73 

Table 12. — Income and expenditures for administration, including handling 

of institution's funds 77 

3 



LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL. 



Department of the Interior, 

Bureau of Education, 
Washington, August 17, 1918. 

Sir: An accurate and comprehensive study of college standards 
and resources has been needed for many years. Such a study should 
help college officers in one part of the country to evaluate credentials 
presented by students from institutions in other parts. It should 
assist parents to select wisely the institutions to which they shall 
send their children. Above all, it should enable college authorities 
to compare their own institutions with others and to strive for the 
most necessary improvements. In 1915, the Bureau of Education 
secured the cooperation of a committee representing higher educa- 
tional associations for the purpose of making such a study. The 
results are presented in the accompanying document, which has been 
prepared by Dr. S. P. Capen, specialist in higher education in this 
bureau, who acted as secretary of the committee. They are less 
complete than could be desired, but nevertheless I believe they will 
accomplish, in a measure, the object in view. 

The war is likely to bring about considerable changes in colleges 
and universities. The effects of it on the financial status and 
academic policies of many institutions are already marked. As a 
record of the condition of a majority of the higher institutions of 
the country in the period immediately preceding the entry of the 
United States into the war, in a period which may prove to be the 
end of an epoch in higher education, the accompanying study is 
especially timely. I therefore recommend it for publication as a 
bulletin of the Bureau of Education. 

Respectfully submitted. 

P. P. Claxton, 

Commissioner. 

The Secretary of the Interior. 

5 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES OF 

ARTS AND SCIENCES. 

REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON HIGHER EDUCATIONAL 

STATISTICS. 



During the year 1914-15 the Bureau of Education organized a 
committee made up of representatives of the principal associations 
dealing with higher education .for the purpose of discussing the 
advisability of classifying colleges and universities on a national 
scale and, if such classification seemed desirable, suggesting methods 
of procedure. The members of the committee, and the association 
represented by each, follow: 

Prof. Walter Ballou Jacobs, New England Association of Colleges and Secondary 

Schools. 
Commissioner John H. Finley, Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools of 

the Middle States and Maryland. 

Prof. Bert E. Young, Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools of the Southern 

States. • 

■ 

Prof. H. A. Hollister, North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. 

Dean R. D. Salisbury, Association of American Universities. 

Chancellor Samuel Avery, National Association of State Universities. 

Dr. N. P. Colwell, American Medical Association. 

President Charles S. Howe, Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education. 

President D.J. Cowling, Association of American Colleges. 

The Commissioner of Education. 

Dr. S. P. Capen, specialist in higher education, Bureau of Education (secretary). 

Several other associations were asked to furnish representatives 
for this committee but declined. 

The committee met at the Bureau of Education, May 3, 1915, and 
organized itself as a permanent committee on higher educational 
statistics to cooperate with the Bureau of Education in the study of 
the standards of higher educational institutions. 

A CRITICAL STUDY OF COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY RESOURCES. 

The committee considered the attempts of the Bureau of Educa- 
tion in 1911 and 1912 to classify the colleges of the country with 
relation to the value of the bachelor's degree. It concluded that 
the continuance of the classification on this basis was at the present 
time, and in view of the resources of the Bureau of Education, not 
desirable. In place of this it urged the prosecution of a critical 
study which should show the resources and equipment and, as far 

7 



8 RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 

as possible, the educational and administrative efficiency of colleges 
and universities. Because of the essential differences in equipment, 
personnel, and standards exhibited by the different types of higher 
institutions, it was deemed wise that separate studies should be made 
of colleges of arts and sciences, engineering schools, schools of agri- 
culture, schools of mines, and teachers' colleges. As representing 
the largest class of institutions, and also the only ones not subject 
to the definite test of professional competency, the committee agreed 
that colleges of arts and sciences .should be the first object of its study. 

SPECIAL INQUIRY TO COLLEGES OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. 

The committee was impressed by the success of the procedure of 
the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools in 
establishing a group of categories for recording the administrative 
efficiency and equipment of institutions. At a meeting of this asso- 
ciation held in March, 1914, the following 10 categories were adopted 
as significant of collegiate standing: / 

1. Number of faculty in independent charge of classes. 

2. Number of faculty with degree of doctor of philosophy. 

3. Number of matriculated students. 

4. Number of degrees granted in course. 

5. Number of elementary courses of instruction actually given. 

6. Number of advanced courses. 

7. Number of professional courses. 

8. Expenditures for salaries. 

9. Hours of class instruction required of members of the faculty. 
10. Material equipment. 

The committee took tnese categories as the basis for its inquiry. 

It instructed the chairman and secretary to prepare blanks to be 

sent to the colleges of arts and sciences of the United States which 

would seek information on these and the following matters : 

(a) Admission requirements. 
(6) Requirements for degrees. 

(c) Endowment and income (indebtedness). 

(d) An analysis of the advanced degrees held by members of the faculty. 
(<?) The number of students and their distribution by classes. 

(/) The ratio of courses announced in the catalogue to those actually given. 
(g) The annual appropriations for laboratories and libraries. 

The blank prepared by the chairman and secretary was sent to 
members of the committee for suggestions and reported to various 
association meetings. As the result of these efforts, numerous modi- 
fications were made. The blank as finally approved is given below. 
It was issued by the committee to the institutions early in 1916. 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



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RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



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RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



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14 RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 

It has evidently been very difficult for college officers to secure 
much of the detailed information called for in this blank. The diffi- 
culty has been most acutely felt by large institutions of complicated 
organization. Many of the larger universities were apparently unable 
to separate the data relating to their colleges of arts and sciences 
without an unjustifiable expenditure of time and money. Keturns 
from nearly all institutions were slow in coming in. Of the 500 
colleges addressed, 252 replied in the course of a year. This repre- 
sents, approximately, 50 percent of the colleges of arts and sciences 
in the country. The committee was convinced that returns had been 
received from a sufficient number to render the study significant and 
valuable. The principal items were accordingly tabulated by the 
Bureau of Education in a single table (Table 1). This table presents, 
in the committee's judgment, the fundamental facts regarding the 
resources and standards of colleges of arts and sciences as far as 
these may be recorded statistically. To the eye of the initiated the 
entries in this table tell their own story. A somewhat extended 
interpretation of them appears to be needed, however, to make the 
record generally clear. 

SUBCOMMITTEE ON DEFINITION OF COLLEGE STANDARDS. 

The committee conferred upon a subcommittee consisting of Messrs. 
Salisbury, Young, and Capen the task of interpretation. The sub- 
committee was instructed to define, if it seemed desirable, the term 
" college, " and possibly other terms relating to the inquiry. 

The subcommittee concluded that, in view of the large number of 
definitions which already have some currency, a formal attempt to 
define the term " college" would at this time tend to confuse the 
issue. It therefore adopted a different procedure. 

It studied with care the returns as tabulated in Table 1, and on 
the basis of these, supplemented by the knowledge which* its members 
had from personal contact of a large number of collegiate institu- 
tions, it formulated a group of categories which it judged to be im- 
portant in estimating college standards and the vitality of collegiate 
institutions. It then indicated the minimum requirement under each 
of these categories which every institution should strive as soon as 
possible to attain. It has grouped the returns from the inquiry so 
that the standing under each of the categories of the institutions 
reporting is clearly exhibited. This grouping appears in Tables 2 
to 13. 

A further word of explanation is perhaps desirable. The committee 
is of the opinion that, in order to be regarded as an acceptable college, 
an institution may not necessarily be expected immediately to meet 
the minimum requirement under every one of the categories. For 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 15 

example, a college might do good work u in a restricted field" with 
a faculty smaller than is noted under Section III below and with 
an income smaller than suggested in Section I below. The com- 
mittee's purpose is rather to outline what may be regarded as the 
essential scope of a successful collegiate enterprise. With smaller 
resources and lower standards in any of the categories mentioned, no 
institution may view its situation with complacency. Due allowance 
is made in estimating the standing of institutions under the following 
categories for denominational institutions whose budgets contem- 
plate no salaries for instructors and whose discipline precludes the 
separation of the college from the preparatory school. The sug- 
gested minimum requirements under 13 heads follow: 

SUGGESTED REQUIREMENTS FOR A SUCCESSFUL COLLEGE OF ARTS AND 

SCIENCES. 

I. A college of arts and sciences should have an annual income of 
at least $40,000. At least three-fifths of an income as small as $40,000 
should be expended for salaries for teaching and administration. Ex- 
ception is made of certain denominational institutions whose teaching 
staffs work without salaries. 

II. A study of conditions at numerous substantial institutions 
indicates that college work of standard grade costs somewhere in the 
neighborhood of $200 a year per student. The minimum productive 
endowment for a college of arts and sciences should be $250,000. It 
is noted, however, that with advancing standards and prices this 
amount should be rapidly increased; probably twice as much will 
be needed in the near future to give an institution the assurance of 
stability. Institutions should strive to bring their endowment to the 
point where it will yield at least half of the money needed for annual 
expenses. 

III. A college of arts and sciences should have as many as 11 
departments, in each of which at least one teacher devotes his whole 
time to collegiate instruction. Some of the larger departments will 
require more than one instructor. The following departments are 
suggested: English; modern languages (or French or German or 
Spanish) other than English; ancient languages ; history; philosophy 
and psychology; economic, political, and social sciences; mathe- 
matics; physics; chemistry; biology (or zoology and botany); geology, 
and geography. In addition it seems desirable, wherever possible, 
to separate the departments of Romance and Germanic languages, 
and some of the other groups might well be divided, especially in the 
larger colleges. 

IV. A college of arts and sciences should have a faculty of at least 
15 members devo ting-full time to college work. 



16 RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF -COLLEGES. 

V. If a college of arts and sciences maintains an academy or pre- 
paratory department, this department should be " distinct in stu- 
dents, faculty, and discipline." Exception may be made, as noted 
above, of certain denominational institutions whose traditions and 
policy require the inclusion of secondary education with collegiate 
education under the same institutional control. In such cases the 
preparatory department should be administratively separated from 
the college department. 

VI. Members of the faculty of a college of arts and sciences should 
have pursued graduate study in addition to the bachelor's degree. 
At least one-fourth of the faculty should hold the degree of doctor of 
philosophy or degrees xepresenting equivalent scholarly attainments 
bestowed by reputable graduate schools. At least three-fourths of the 
faculty should have secured the master's degree in course at a repu- 
table graduate school. 

VII. Fifteen hours of teaching a week should be regarded as the 
maximum program of a college teacher. 

VIII. Fifteen or sixteen credit hours a week for each student for 
36 weeks a year for four years should be regarded as the normal pro- 
gram of work for students. 

IX. While heretofore 14 units of secondary work has been regarded 
as the acceptable minimum for admission to college, and at the time 
of the issuance of this inquiry represented the standard set by most 
standardizing agencies, there is now a general tendency to raise this 
requirement to 15 units. A college of arts and sciences should require 
15 units for unconditional admission. In judging the reports of col- 
leges appearing in this study, however, the prevailing standard of 
1915 should be taken into account. ' 

X. The maximum number of conditions allowed should not exceed 
two. 

XI. The average salary for assistant professors in 25 colleges 1 of 
unquestioned standing, in Table 1, is $1,369. The average salary of 
professors at the same group of institutions is $2,174. Conditions of 
living differ, and an absolute standard can not justly be set up. Col- 
leges should plan to make their salary schedules approximate at least 
the foregoing averages. 

XII. Recitation or quiz sections should not contain more than 
from 20 to 30 students. Fifteen or sixteen students should be the 
limit in laboratory sections. 

1 Pomona College, Cal.; Mills College, Cal.; Trinity College, Conn.; George Washington University, 
D. C; Emory College, Ga.; Knox College, 111.; Butler College, Ind.; Morningside College, Iowa; Wash-, 
burn College, Kans.; H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College, La.; Bowdoin College, Me.; Goueher College, 
Md.; Boston University, Mass.; Clark College, Mass.; Carleton College, Minn.; Washington University, 
Mo.; Hobart College, N. Y.; Ohio Wesleyan University; Reed College, Oreg.; Lafayette College, Pa.; 
Haverford College, Pa.; Vanderbilt University, Term.; Middlebury College, Vt.; Randolph-Macon. 
Woman's College, Va.; Beloit College, Wis. 






RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 17 

XIII. At least $1,000 a year should be expended for the purchase 
of new books and periodicals for the library. Probably two or three 
times this figure would be needed to keep the library in a sound con- 
dition. A similar sum should be appropriated annually for the pur- 
chase of new equipment and apparatus for scientific laboratories. 

TABLES. 

Table 1 is a summary in which the principal facts derived from the 
inquiry are presented. The succeeding tables exhibit the same mate- 
rial, but are designed for convenience of reference. Each table shows 
the status of all the reporting institutions with respect to one or two 
of the suggested requirements for a successful college of arts and 
sciences or juxtaposes two related categories appearing in the sum- 
mary table. Each is preceded by a brief statement of the points 
illustrated. 

77642°— 18 2 



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44 



RESOUKCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



FINANCIAL FOUNDATION. 

Suggested Requirements I and II. — I. A college of arts and sciences 
should have an annual income of at least $40,000. At least three 
fifths of an income as small as $40,000 should be expended for sal- 
aries for teaching and administration. Exception is made of certain 
denominational institutions whose teaching staffs work without 
salaries. 

II. A study of conditions at numerous substantial institutions 
indicates that college work of standard grade costs somewhere in 
the neighborhood of $200 a year per student. The minimum pro- 
ductive endowment for a college of arts and sciences should be 
$250,000. It is noted, however, that with advancing prices this 
amount should be rapidly increased; probably twice as much will 
be needed in the near future to give an institution the assurance of 
stability. Institutions should strive to bring their endowment to 
the point where it will yield at least half the money needed for annual 
expenses. 

Table 2. — Productive endowment, income, and debt, 1914-15. 
[Tax-supported institutions are marked with f and Roman Catholic institutions with °.] 



Institutions. 



Endow- 
ment. 



Income. 



Debt. 



University of Alabamaf 

University of Arizonaf 

Central college, Arkansas 

Hendrix College, Arkansas 

Pomona College, California 

Occidental College, California 

Mills College, California 

University of Redlands, California 

University of Santa Clara, ° California 

Leland Stanford Junior University, California 

University of Coloradof 

Colorado College 

University of Denver, Colorado 

Trinity College, Connecticut 

Yale University, Connecticut r 

Gallaudet College, District of Columbia 

George Washington University, District of Columbia . 
Howard University (colored), District of Columbia . . . 

University of Floridaf 

Columbia College, Florida 

Florida State College for Womenf 

University of Georgiaf 

Atlanta University (colored), Georgia 

Cox College, Georgia 

North Georgia Agricultural College 

Agnes Scott College, Georgia 

Piedmont College, Georgia 

Bessie Tift College, Georgia 

Brenau College, Georgia 

Emory University, Georgia 

Shorter College, Georgia 

University of Idahof 

Aurora College, Ilnnois 

Illinois Wesleyan University 

Blackburn College, Illinois 

De Paul University, Illinois 

Loyola University, Illinois 

James Miilikin University, Illinois 

Knox College, Illinois 

Illinois Woman's College 

Lake Forest College, Illinois 

Frances Shimer School, Illinois 

Northwestern College, Illinois 

Rockford College, Illinois , 



$627, 467 
10,500 



295,000 
673, 198 
312,000 
486,310 
97, 000* 



,975,338 

83,000 

042,592 

420, 000 

, 226, 801 

, 152, 836 



S210 

423 

29 

39 

347 

50 

80 

50 

274 

1,235 

300 

148 

140 

83 

1,777 



136,340 
309,018 
219, 650 



220 
203 
170 



372, 270 
107, 563 



175,568 

105, 000 

6,000 



97 
286 
62 
31 
38 
94 
34 
56 
151 



50, 000 
666, 346 



70 
264 



373,729 
248, 813 



208, 777 
504, 463 
123, 155 
832, 938 
78,926 
250, 529 
208,976 



96 
71 
104 
216 
43 
40 
92 



421 
021 
193 
966 
133 
727 
774 
505 
200 
891 
436 
887 
000 
835 
134 



954 
964 
297 



885 
302 
927 
000 
700 
711 
719 
000 
860 



560 
867 



851 
618 
434 



588 
155 
984 
153 
823 
082 
189 







$24, 000 

58, 886 



8,000 



125,529 



5,000 








25,000 



42, 709 



35, 150 
11,000 
87, 000 
27, 000 
65,500 








13,000 




89,000 


30,000 
55, 000 
13,000 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



45 



Table 2. — Productive endowment, income, and debt, 1914-15 — Continued. 
[Tax-supported institutions are marked with t and Roman Catholic institutions with °.] 



Institutions. 



Endow- 
ment. 



Augustana College, Illinois 

Indiana University! 

Wabash College, Indiana 

Earlham College, Indiana 

Franklin College, Indiana 

De Pauw University, Indiana 

Butler College, Indiana 

University of Notre Dame, ° Indiana 

Taylor University, Indiana 

Iowa State Teachers Coliegef 

Coe College, Iowa 

"Wart burg College, Iowa 

Des Moines College, Iowa 

Drake University, Iowa 

Parsons College, Iowa 

State University of Iowaf 

Cornell College, Iowa 

Central University of Iowa 

Morningside College, Iowa 

Buena Vista College, Iowa 

Midland College, Kansas 

College of Emporia, Kansas 

Ottawa University, Kansas 

Kansas Wesleyan University 

Cooper College, Kansas 

Washburn College, Kansas 

Southwestern College, Kansas 

Ogden College, Kentucky 

Centre College, Kentucky 

Georgetown College, Kentucky 

University of Kentucky f 

Transylvania College, Kentucky 

University of Louisville,t Kentucky 

Bethel College, Kentucky 

H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial. College, Louisiana. 

Loyola University, ° Louisiana 

Bowdoin College, Maine 

Bates College, Maine 

University of Mainef 

St. John's College, Maryland 

Goucher College, Maryland 

Johns Hopkins University, Maryland 

Morgan College (colored), Maryland 

Washington College, Maryland 

Rock Hill College, Maryland 

Hood College, Maryland 

Maryland College for Women 

Amherst College, Massachusetts 

Boston University, Massachusetts 

Harvard University, Massachusetts 

Smith College, Massachusetts 

Wheaton College, Massachusetts 

Mount Holyoke College, Massachusetts 

Tufts College, Massachusetts 

Clark College, Massachusetts 

Alma College, Michigan 

University of Michiganf 

St. John's University, Minnesota 

Augsburg Seminary, Minnesota 

Carleton College, Minnesota 

Hamline University, Minnesota 

Macalester College, Minnesota 

College of St. Catherine, Minnesota 

Gustavus Adolphus College, Minnesota 

College of St. Teresa, Minnesota 

Mississippi College 

Meridian College, Mississippi 

University of Mississippi 

Stephens College, Missouri 

Westminster College, Missouri 

William Jewell College, Missouri 

Park College, Missouri 

Lindenwood College, Missouri 

. Forest Park College, Missouri 

St. Louis University ? Missouri 

Washington University, Missouri 

Drury College, Missouri 

Central Wesleyan College, Missouri 

University of Montanat ; , , , — 



S441 
744 
739 
493 
300 
1,425 



750 

19 

111 

804 

235 

494 

861 

89 

400 

25 

85 

112 

236 

115 

139 

363 

130 

200 



275 
205 
319 



63 
2, 765 



2,312 
749 
252 



473 

7,287 

56 



42 



2,736 

1,308 

2.8,471 

2, 182 

896 

1,426 

3,020 

1,300 

401 

963 



32 

871 
842 
468 



265 



125 



700 
40 



853 

453 

22 



764 
000 
800 
538 
519 
959 



290 



000 
000 
000 
766 
176 
338 
223 
826 
000 
000 
000 
000 
786 
000 
271 
377 
000 
000 



Income. 



15 
57 

117 
48 

127 
45 



47 
331 
63 
19 
51 
189 
38 
986 
132 
18 
46 
20 
25 
36 
38 
20 
21 
78 
43 
11 



000 
000 
612 



800 
000 



993 
050 



831 
077 
000 



500 



058 
869 
046 
296 
310 
173 
204 
000 
070 
193 



570 
937 
000 
739 



000 



000 



000 
000 



085 
876 
000 



6.455,804 
250.000 
209, 000 



41 
321 
41 
79 
12 
166 



151 

89 

364 

.53 

212 

628 

34 

62 

26 



914 
000 
702 
551 
253 
726 
314 



135 
865 
452 
797 
229 
718 
217 
513 
079 
850 
344 
072 
000 
549 
978 
045 
453 
753 
615 
018 



215 
062 
270 
250 
490 
936 



563 
809 
042 
000 
569 
830 
213 
795 
000 
71.840 



221,817 

222, 474 

3,019,602 

736, 734 

119, 676 

336,998 

301,955 

85, 250 

54, 673 

2,321,241 

71,145 

21,007 

204,584 

63, 264 

55,796 



42, 295 
72, 500 
60, 293 



269, 500 
49,000 



84,047 

91 ; 708 

128,307 



716, 471 
54.084 
24, 607 

215,945 



Debt. 



569,075 







34,500 



260,000 



80, 000 

283,000 

61,875 





6,744 



50,000 
1,200 
61,635 
38,900 
19,000 
8,000 
60,000 







22, 000 
30,552 





,569 







3.500 

108, 842 







25,000 

5,000 



111,700 

40,000 









10,366 




15.000 

51, 161 





120,000 

35,000 

200,000 



23,000 
20,000 
31,000 
44,000 







39,000 





46 



RESOURCES' AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



Table 2. — Productive endowment, income, and debt, 1914-15- — Continued. 
[Tax-supported institutions are marked with f and Roman Catholic institutions with °.] 



Institutions. 



Endow- 
ment. 



Income. 



Debt. 



Bellevue College, Nebraska 

Union College, Nebraska 

Doane College, Nebraska 

University of Nebraska! 

New Hampshire College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts!. 

College of St. Elizabeth, New Jersey 

Upsala College, New Jersey 

University of New Mexico! 

New York State College for Teachersf 

Alfred University, New York 

St. Stephen's College, New York 

Wells College, New York 

St. Lawrence University, New York 

Elniira College, New York 

Hobart College, New York 

College of New Rochelle," New York 

Barnard College, New York 

Columbia University, New York 

College of the City of New York!... 

Hunter College of the City of New York! 

New York University 

Vassar College, New York 

University of Rochester, New York 

Union University, New York 

University of North Carolinaf 

Davidson College, North Carolina 

Trinity College, North Carolina 

Elon College, North Carolina 

Guilford College, North Carolina 

Shaw University (colored), North Carolina 

Weaver College, North Carolina 

Salem Academy and College, North Carolina 

University of North Dakota! 

Municipal University of Akron,! Ohio 

Ohio University! 

Baldwin- Wallace College, Ohio 

Bluffton College, Ohio 

Cedarville College, Ohio 

University of Concinnati,! Ohio 

Western Reserve University, Ohio 

Capital University, Ohio 

St. Mary College, Ohio 

Defiance College, Ohio , . 

Ohio Wesleyan University 

Kenyon College, Ohio 

Marietta College, Ohio 

Muskingum College, Ohio 

Miami University,! Ohio 

Oxford College for Women, Ohio 

Western College for Women, Ohio 

Lake Erie College, Ohio 

Rio Grande College, Ohio 

Otterbein University, Ohio 

College of Wooster, Ohio 

Methodist University of Oklahoma 

Kingfisher College, Oklahoma 

University of Oklahoma! 

Albany College, Oregon 

Pacific University, Oregon 

MeMinnville College, Oregon 

Reed College, Oregon 

Pacific College, Oregon 

Willamette University, Oregon 

Moravian College, Pennsylvania 

Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania 

Beaver College, Pennsylvania 

Wilson College, Pennsylvania 

Lafayette College, Pennsylvania 

Pennsylvania College 

Haverford College, Pennsylvania 

Franklin and Marshall College, Pennsylvania 

Lincoln University (colored), Pennsylvania 

Allegheny College, Pennsylvania 

Irving Female College, Pennsylvania 

Albright College, Pennsylvania 

Westminister College, Pennsylvania 

Drexel Institute, Pennsylvania 

University of Pennsylvania 

Susquehanna University, Pennsylvania 



$15,085 



282,757 
787, 255 
950,000 



411,963 
102,733 
404,400 
747,940 
119,780 
750,073 



1,586,137 
30,900,471 



1,393 

1,660 

1,650 

982 

148 

285 

1,395 

86 

175 

51 



170 

1,705 

82 

150 

535 
45 
85 

869 
3,526 

145 



273 
990 
509 
556 
123 
109 
1 
193 
244 
78 
250 

1,229 

65 

133 

3,670 

204 

224 

60 

3,000 
110 
516 
108 

2,002 

12 

71 

620 

390 

2,000 
485 
280 
425 



300 

435 

2,000 

6,025 

72 



805 
105 
629 
173 
594 
000 
292 
460 
000 
122 



66 

45 

1,368 

273 

48 

13 

62 

110 

36 

40 

146 

236 

104 

125 

70 

262 

4,204 

526 

550 

630 

774 

F^139 

140 

261 

51 

118 

52 

43 

37 



266 
761 
753 
000 
102 
000 
907 
671 
608 
309 



113 
268 

65 
419 

46 

10 

7 

867 

438 

24 



266 
100 
002 
428 
124 
775 
000 
616 
852 
000 
000 
578 
000 
813 
000 
219 
554 
450 
000 
000 
555 
352 
300 
000 
475 
128 
000 
268 
645 
453 
000 



000 
390 
000 
177 
000 



41 

145 
66 
42 
50 

328 
53 

112 

76 

8 

59 

210 
14 
17 

231 
22 
31 
27 

122 

7 

39 

33 

280 
24 
65 

130 
65 

160 
47 
35 

102 
35 
41 
69 
95 
1,738 
31 



155 
159 
448 
039 
236 
675 
158 
577 
103 
307 
546 
774 
341 
543 
890 
289 
423 
937 
108 
124 
415 
613 
996 
117 
658 
830 
829 
686 
600 
257 



367 
947 
833 
250 
447 
456 
708 
985 
278 
883 



300 
841 
929 
016 
734 
127 
384 
189 
200 
196 
004 
315 
268 
147 
225 
802 
247 
850 
500 
080 
402 
562 
667 
416 
484 
000 
588 
705 
951 
568 
541 
487 
914 
138 
088 
600 



$24,000 



40,765 







21,620. 




40,000 

40,000 

2,000 





52, 122 




645,000 







109,315 





52,515 

60,000 



13,200 

38,500 

5,346 



52,650 

70,000 









20,000 

""is* 666 
. o 

97,000 


15, 155 



15,000 

3,000 

36, 770 

3,434 

4,000 




54,000 
45,000 
30,665 


21,570 
28,000 


51,265 



13,000 

126,232 


96,578 


21,709 
11,882 





80,000 



50,000 



RESOURCES' AND> STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 

Table 2. — Productive endowment, income, and debt, 1914—15 — Continued. 
[Tax-supported institutions are marked with f and Roman Catholic institutions with ".] 



4i 



Institutions. 



Endow- 
ment. 



Pennsylvania State College! $598, 913 

Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania 1, 627, 447 

Washington and Jefferson College, Pennsylvania . 914, 396 

Waynesburg College, Pennsylvania 86, 060 

College of Charleston J South Carolina 306, 300 

University of South Carolinaf 

Furman University, South Carolina 

Columbia College, South Carolina 

Converse College, South Carolina 156, 358 

Wofford College, South Carolina 194, 179 

University of South Dakotaf 

King College, Tennessee 2o, 000 

University of Chattanooga, Tennessee ' 407, 519 

Tusculum College, Tennessee 177, 851 

Knoxville College (colored), Tennessee 1 10, 500 

Milligan College, Tennessee [ 

Tennessee College I 

George Peabody College for Teachers, Tennessee j 2, 000, 000 

Fisk University (colored), Tennessee 190,592 

Vanderbilt University. Tennessee 2, 150, 000 

University of the South, Tennessee 393, 282 

University of Texasf 2, 000, 000 

Howard Payne College, Texas 

Rice Institute, Texas 10,000,000 

Austin College, Texas ISO, 000 

Baylor University, Texas 305, 904 

University of Utahf 

Middlebury College, Vermont 518, 983 

St. Michael's College, ° Vermont 

Bridgewater College, Virginia 20, 168 

University of Virginiaf 2, 211, 472 

Roanoke Institute, Virginia 

Emory and Henry College, Virginia 25, 000 

Hampden-Sidney College, Virginia 180, 654 

Hollins College, Virginia 

Washington. and Lee University, Virginia 878, 902 

Randolph-Macon Woman's College, Virginia 262, 000 

Richmond College, Virginia 

Virginia Union University (colored) 100, 000 

College of William and Mary, f Virginia 151,327 

University of Washington! 5, 000, 000 

Spokane College, Washington 

Davis and Elkins College, West Virginia 100, 000 

Lawrence College, Wisconsin 896, 211 

Beloit College, Wisconsin 1 , 339, 241 

University of Wisconsin)- 782, 662 

Milton College, Wisconsin 145, 153 

Concordia College, Wisconsin 8, 500 

Milwaukee-Downer College, Wisconsin .• 216, 207 

Mission-House, Wisconsin 20, 000 

Campion College, ° Wisconsin 50, 000 

Ripon College, Wisconsin 252, 199 

St. Clara College and Academy," Wisconsin 



Income. 



$241,309 
927,009 
68, 941 
20, 685 
22, 102 
142, 227 
49,447 



74, 567 

39,578 

194, 772 



49,917 
64,011 
41,580 



52,536 
169, 243 

54, 242 
268, 292 
131, 736 
602, 609 

22, 000 
529,000 

82, 880 
148,919 
241,919 
126,925 

22, 450 

25,414 
444,315 



53,254 

25,712 

107, 489 

104, 759 

202,900 



38, 113 

53,550 

564, 804 



16, 600 

110, 566 

138, 298 

2, 767, 701 

20,835 

28, 455 

131, 164 



65, 770 
60, 784 
35, 134 



Debt. 





$118,323 

2,000 







42,486 





72,000 



10,336 

7,000 

23, 077 



6 

1 

325,4 



00 

100,000 

420,94 










200,000 




42,000 



3,000 

18,000 





18,508 

6,500 



2,200 

900 



45,000 



48 RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OP' COLLEGES. 

Table 3. — Income and amount spent for salaries of college teachers. 



Institutions. 



University of Alabama 

University of Arizona 

Central College, Arkansas 

Hendrix College, Arkansas 

Pomona College, California 

Occidental College, California 

Mills College, California 

University of Redlands, California 

University of Santa Clara, California 

Leland Stanford Junior University, California 

University of Colorado 

Colorado College •. . 

University of Denver, Colorado 

Trinity College, Connecticut 

Yale University, Connecticut 

Gallaudet College, District of Columbia 

George Washington University, District of Columbia . 
Howard University (colored), District of Columbia. . . 

University of Florida 

Columbia College, Florida 

Florida State College for Women 

University of Georgia 

Atlanta University (colored), Georgia 

Cox College, Georgia 

North Georgia Agricultural College 

Agnes Scott College, Georgia 

Piedmont College, Georgia 

Bessie Tift College, Georgia 

Brenau College, Georgia 

Emory University, Georgia 

Shorter College, Georgia 

University of Idaho 

Aurora College, Illinois 

Illinois Wesleyan University 

Blackburn College, Illinois 

De Paul University, Illinois '. . . 

Loyola University, Illinois 

James Millikin University, Illinois 

Knox College, Illinois 

Illinois Woman's College. 

Lake Forest College, Illinois 

Frances Shimer School, Illinois 

Northwestern College, Illinois 

Rockford College, Illinois 

Augustana College, Illinois 

Indiana University 

Wabash College, Indiana 

Earlham College, Indiana 

Franklin College, Indiana 

De Pauw University, Indiana 

Butler College, Indiana 

University of Notre Dame, Indiana 

Taylor University, Indiana 

Iowa State Teachers' College 

Coe College, Iowa 

Wartburg College, Iowa 

Des Moines College, Iowa 

Drake University, Iowa 

Parsons College, Iowa 

State University of Iowa 

Cornell College, Iowa ".. 

Central University of Iowa 

Morningside College, Iowa 

Buena Vista College, Iowa 

Midland College, Kansas 

College of Emporia, Kansas 

Ottawa University, Kansas 

Kansas Wesleyan University 

Cooper College, Kansas 

Washburn College, Kansas 

Southwestern College, Kansas 

Ogden College, Kentucky 

Centre College, Kentucky 

Georgetown College, Kentucky 

University of Kentucky 

Transylvania Collegej Kentucky 

University of Louisville, Kentucky 

Bethel College, Kentucky. . ,., — , 



Income, 
1914-15. 



$210 

423 

29 

39 

347 
50 
80 
50 

274 

1, 235 

300 

148 

140 

83 

1,777 



220 
203 
170 



97 
286 
62 
31 
38 
94 
34 
56 
151 



70 
264 



96 
71 

104 

216 
43 
40 
92 
99 

615 
57 

117 
48 

127 
45 



47 
331 
63 
19 
51 
189 
38 
986 
132 
18 
46 
20 
25 
36 
38 
20 
21 
78 
43 
11 



421 
021 
193 
966 
133 
727 
774 
505 
200 
891 
436 
887 
000 
835 
134 



954 
964 
297 



885 
302 
927 
000 
700 
711 
719 
000 
860 



560 

867 



851 
618 
434 



588 
155 
984 
153 
823 
082 
189 
914 
000 
702 
551 
253 
726 
314 



135 

865 
452 
797 
229 
718 
217 
513 
079 
850 
344 
072 
000 
549 
978 
045 
453 
753 
615 
018 



41,215 
32i;062 
41, 270 
79, 250 
12,490 



Spent for 
salaries of 

college 
teachers, 

1914-15. 



61, 
3, 
11, 
50, 
26, 
35, 
23, 

*506," 
96, 
58, 

' "42," 
280, 



45, 
35, 
28, 
4, 
50, 
52, 
20, 

6, 
18, 
25, 

8, 
20, 
13, 
26, 

"58," 



15, 



41, 
30, 
21, 
36, 
12, 
16, 
19, 
21, 

241, 
35, 
36, 
14, 
54, 
30, 
31, 
5, 

147, 
29, 

"±2," 
40, 
12, 
193, 
32, 
10, 
20, 

8, 
12, 
22, 
12. 
14, 
11, 
19, 
10, 

6, 
19, 
12, 

9, 
12, 
33, 

A. 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 49 

Table 3. — Income and amount spent for salaries of college teachers — Continued. 



Institutions. 



Income, 
1914-15. 



Spent for 
salaries of 

college 
teachers, 

1914-15. 



H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College, Louisiana 

Loyola University, Louisiana 

Bowdoin College, Maine 

Bates College, Maine 

University of Maine 

St. John's College, Maryland 

Goucher College, Maryland 

Johns Hopkins University, Maryland 

Morgan College (colored), Maryland 

Washington College, Maryland 

Rock Hill College, Maryland 

Hood College, Maryland 

Maryland College for Women 

Amherst College, Massachusetts , 

Boston University, Massachusetts 

Harvard University, Massachusetts 

Smith College, Massachusetts 

Wheaton College, Massachusetts 

Mount Holyoke College, Massachusetts 

Tufts College, Massachusetts 

Clark College, Massachusetts 

Alma College, Michigan 

University of Michigan 

St. John's University, Minnesota 

Augsburg Seminary, Minnesota 

Carleton College, Minnesota 

Hamline University, Minnesota 1 

Macalester College, Minnesota 

College of St. Catherine. Minnesota 

Gustavus Adolphus College, Minnesota 

College of St. Teresa, Minnesota 

Mississippi College 

Meridian College, Mississippi • 

University of Mississippi 

Stephens College, Missouri 

Westminster College, Missouri 

William Jewell College, Missouri 

Park College, Missouri 

Lindenwood College, Missouri 

Forest Park College, Missouri 

St. Louis University, Missouri 

Washington University, Missouri 

Drury College, Missouri 

Central Weslevan College, Missouri 

University of Montana 

Bellevue College, Nebraska 

Union College, Nebraska 

Doane College. Nebraska 

University of Nebraska 

New Hampshire College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts . 

College of St. Elizabeth, New Jersey 

Upsala College, New Jersey 

University of New Mexico. 

New York State College for Teachers 

Alfred University, New York 

St. Stephen's College, New York 

Wells College, New York 

St. Lawrence University, New York 

Elmira College, New York 

Hobart College, New York 

College of New Rochelle, New York 

Barnard College, New York 

Columbia University, New York 

College of the City of New York 

Hunter College of the City of New York 

New York University 

Vassar College, New York 



University of Rochester, New York 

Union University, New York 

University of North Carolina 

Davidson College, North Carolina 

Trinity College, North Carolina 

Elon College. North Carolina 

Guilford College, North Carolina 

Shaw University (colored), North Carolina. . . 

Weaver College, North Carolina 

Salem Academy and College, North Carolina. 
University of North Dakota 



$166,936 



151,563 
89, 809 

364,042 
53,000 

212, 569 

628,830 
34, 213 
62, 795 

■26,000 
71,840 



221,817 

222, 474 

3,019,602 

736, 734 

119,676 

336, 998 

301,955 

85,250 

54,673 

2,321,241 

71,145 

21,007 

204, 584 

63,264 

55, 796 



42,295 
72,500 
60,293 



269,500 
49,000 



84, 047 

91,708 

128,307 



716,471 

54, 084 

24, 607 

215,945 

36, 155 

66, 159 

45,448 

1,368,039 

273,236 

48, 675 

13,158 

62,577 

110, 103 

36,307 

40, 546 

146,774 

236,341 

104, 543 

125,890 

70,289 

262, 423 

4, 204, 937 

526, 108 

550, 124 

630, 415 

774, 613 

139, 996 

140, 117 

261, 658 

51,830 

118,829 

52,686 

43,600 

37,257 



113,367 
268,947 



$53, 270 



65, 101 
44,896 

134,097 
17, 600 
44,741 

353,934 

6,675 

13,000 



18,075 
8,100 



48,333 
550,723 
229, 159 

24, 475 
105,877 



43,700 

17,881 

326,906 



15,209 
53,698 
30,350 
24,954 
38,000 
13,938 
15,000 



40,000 
9,786 
12,610 
21,491 
23,350 
7,500 



260,448 
26, 225 
8,750 
64,995 
11,500 
8,381 
17,670 

250, 578 

64,500 

10,000 

8,860 

34,450 

9,432 

21, 787 

17,000 

40,288 

23,790 

32,733 

33, 500 

7,536 

130,330 
1,252,658 

319,325 

287, 546 
52, 261 

181,498 
78,232 
65,379 
75,629 
27, 185 
63, 142 
15, 800 
12, 150 



4,800 

19,370 

115,200 



77642°— 1&- 



50 RESOURCES AND STANDARDS' OF COLLEGES. 

Table 3. — Income and amount spent for salaries of college teachers — Continued. 



Institutions. 



Income, 
1914-15. 



Spent for 
salaries of 

college 
teachers, 

1914-15. 



Municipal University of Akron, Ohio 

Ohio University 

Baldwin- Wallace College, Ohio 

Bluff ton College, Ohio 

Cedarville College, Ohio 

University of Cincinnati, Ohio 

Western Reserve University, Ohio 

Capital University, Ohio 

St. Mary College, "Ohio 

Defiance College, Ohio 

Ohio Wesleyan University 

Kenyon College, Ohio 

Marietta College, Ohio 

Muskingum College, Ohio 

Miami University, Ohio 

Oxford College for Women, Ohio 

Western College for Women, Ohio 

Lake Erie College, Ohio 

Rio Grande College, Ohio „ 

Otterbein University, Ohio 

College of Wooster, Ohio 

Methodist University of Oklahoma 

Kingfisher College, Oklahoma 

University of Oklahoma 

Albany College, Oregon „ 

Pacific University, Oregon 

McMinnville College, Oregon 

Pacific College, Oregon „ 

Reed College, Oregon 

Willamette University, Oregon 

Moravian College, Pennsylvania 

Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania 

Beaver College, Pennsylvania 

Wilson College, Pennsylvania 

Lafayette College, Pennsylvania 

Pennsylvania College 

Haverford College, Pennsylvania 

Franklin and Marshall College, Pennsylvania 

Lincoln University (colored), Pennsylvania 

Allegheny College, Pennsylv ania •. 

Irving Female College, Pennsylvania 

Albright College, Pennsylvania 

Westminster College, Pennsylvania 

Drexel Institute, Pennsylvania y 

University of Pennsylvania 

Susquehanna University, Pennsylvania 

Pennsylvania State College 

Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania 

Washington and Jefferson College, Pennsylvania . 

Waynes burg College, Pennsylvania 

College of Charleston, South Carolina 

University of South Carolina 

Furman University, South Carolina 

Columbia College, South Carolina 

Converse College, South Carolina. 

Woflord College, South Carolina 

University of South Dakota 

King College, Tennessee 

University of Chattanooga, Tennessee 

Tusculum College, Tehnesseee 

Knoxville College (colored), Tennessee 

Milligan College, Tennessee 

Tennessee College „ 

George Peabody College-for Teachers, Tennessee.. 

Fisk University (colored), Tennessee 

Vandefbilt University, Tennessee 

University of the South, Tennessee 

University of Texas 

Howard Payne College, Texas 

Rice Institute, Texas.... 

Austin College, Texas 

Baylor University, Texas 

University of Utah 

Middlebury College, Vermont 

St. Michael's College, Vermont , 

Bridge water College, Virginia 

University of Virginia 

Roanoke Institute, Virginia. . ........... .J 



$65,833 

419; 250 

46, 447 

23,264 

7,708 

867,985 

438, 278 

24,883 



41, 688 

145,300 
66, 841 
42,929 
50, 016 

328, 734 
53, 127 

112,384 

76, 189 

8,200 

59, 196 

210,004 
14,315 
17, 268 

231, 147 

22, 225 

31,802 

27, 247 

7,500 

122, 850 
39, 080 
33,402 

280,562 
24, 667 
65, 416 

130, 484 
65,000 

160, 588 
47, 705 
35,951 

102, 568 
35, 541 
41, 487 
69,914 
95, 138 
1, 738. 088 
31,600 

941,309 

227,009 
68, 941 
20, 685 
22, 102 

142,227 
49,447 



74, 567 

39, 578 

194, 772 



49,917 
64,011 
41,580 



52,536 
169,243 

54,242 
268, 292 
131,736 
602, 609 

22, 000 
529,000 

82,880 
148,919 
241,919 
126, 925 

22, 450 

25, 414 
444,315 



$28, 128 

36, 150 

24, 341 

20, 720 

6,168 

124, 605 

138, 922 

17, 450 



15, 259 
66,777 
21,688 
22, 795 
10, 061 
53,050 
12,000 
26, 752 
25, 220 

4,000 
19, 470 
50,971 
10, 000 

9, 600 
72, 452 
11,450 
11,270 
13,975 

8,750 
44,325 
12,000 

9,500 
110, 135 

9,354 
13,350 
72, 437 
26,350 
56,350 
29, 184 
10, 766 
40, 283 
10, 820 
12,500 
29, 479 



256, 250 
18, 000 

408, 059 
70, 400 
28, 835 
9,000 
12, 100 
57, 235 



17, 208 
23, 213 
73,986 



17,200 

7,775 

22,689 

6,000 

7,975 

61,000 

16,517 

58, 000 

20,229 

■239, 107 

10, 500 

54, 108 

15, 100 

37, 642 

175, 135 

43, 447 



7,200 
98, 406 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS- OF COLLEGES. 51 

Table 3. — Income and amount spent for salaries of college teachers — Continued. 



Institutions. 



Income, 
1914-15. 



Spent for 
salaries of 

college 
teachers, 

1914-15. 



Emory and Henry College, Virginia 

Hampden-Sidney College, Virginia 

Hollins College, Virginia 

Washington and Lee University, Virginia 

Randolph-Macon "Woman's College, Virginia . 

Richmond College, Virginia 

Virginia Union University (colored) 

College of William and Mary, Virginia 

University of Washington. 

Spokane College, Washington 

Davis and Elkins College, West Virginia 

Lawrence College, Wisconsin 

Beloit College, Wisconsin 

University of Wisconsin 

Milton College, Wisconsin 

Concordia College, Wisconsin 

Milwaukee-Downer College, Wisconsin 

Mission-House, Wisconsin 

Campion College, Wisconsin 

Ripon College, Wisconsin 

St. Clara College and Academy, Wisconsin. .. 



$.53, 254 
25,712 
107, 489 
104, 759 
202, 900 



38, 113 

53, 550 

564, 804 



16, 600 

110, 566 

138,298 

,767,701 

20, 835 

28, 455 

131, 164 



65, 770 
60, 784 
35,134 



§12,375 

11, 450 

39,801 

53,735 

53,200 

6,000 

24,400 

199, 522 

5,000 

6,642 

38,776 

59, 006 

483, 174 

9,233 

10, 680 

21, 870 



18, 720 
1,260 



NUMBER OF DEPARTMENTS. 

Suggested Requirement III. — A college of arts and sciences should 
have as many as 11 departments, in each of which at least one 
teacher should devote his whole time to collegiate instruction. 
Some of the larger departments will require more than one instructor. 
The following departments are suggested: English; modern languages 
(or French or German or Spanish) other than English; ancient lan- 
guages; history; philosophy and psychology; economic, political, 
and social sciences; mathematics; plrysics; chemistry; biology (or 
zoology and botany) ; geology and geography. In addition, it seems 
desirable, wherever possible, to separate the departments of Ro- 
mance and Germanic languages; and some of the other groups might 
well be divided, especially in the larger colleges. 

Table 4. — Institutions having eleven specified departments or fewer, 1915-16. 



Institutions. 


Number 
of. depart- 
ments. 


1 

Institutions. 


Number 
of depart- 
ments. 


University of Alabama 


11 

11 

4 

2 

11 

11 

7 

11 

11 

11 
11 

ii 


Trinity College, Connecticut 


11 


University of Arizona 


11 


Central College, Arkansas . . . 




11 


Hendrix College, Arkansas 


Gallaudet College, District of Columbia . . 
George Washington University, Dis- 
trict of Columbia \ , 


4 


Pomona College, California 




Occidental College California 


11 


Mills College, California 


Howard University (colored), District of 
of Columbia 




University of Redlands, California 

University of Santa Clara, California .... 


11 


University of Florida 


11 


Leland Standord Junior University, 
California 


Columbia College, Florida 


8 


Florida State College for Women 


11 


University of Colorado . . 


11 




Atlanta University (colored), Georgia . . . 





52 RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OP COLLEGES. 

Table 4. — Institutions having eleven specified departments orfeiver, 1915-16, 



Institutions. 



Cox College, Georgia 

North Georgia Agricultural College 

Agnes Scott College, Georgia 

Piedmont College, Georgia 

Bessie Tift College, Georgia 

Brenau College, Georgia 

Emory University, Georgia 

Shorter College, Georgia 

University of Idaho 

Aurora College, Illinois 

Illinois Wesleyan University 

Blackburn College, Illinois 

De Paul University, Illinois 

Loyola University, Illinois 

James Millikin University, Illinois 

Knox College, Illinois 

Illinois Woman's College 

Lake Forest College, Illinois 

Frances Shimer School, Illinois 

Northwestern College, Illinois 

Rockf ord College, Illinois 

Augustana College, Illinois 

Indiana University 

"Wabash College, Indiana 

Earlham College, Indiana 

Franklin College, Indiana 

De Pauw University, Indiana. 

Butler College, Indiana 

University of Notre Dame, Indiana 

Taylor University, Indiana 

Iowa State Teachers College 

Coe College, Iowa 

"Wart burg College, Iowa 

Des Moines College, Iowa 

Drake University, Iowa 

Parsons College, Iowa 

State University of Iowa 

Cornell College, Iowa 

Central University of Iowa 

Mornings ide College, Iowa 

Buena Vista College, Iowa 

Midland College, Kansas 

College of Emporia, Kansas 

Ottawa University, Kansas 

Kansas Wesleyan University 

Cooper College, Kansas '. 

Washburn College, Kansas 

Southwestern College, Kansas 

Ogden College, Kentucky 

Centre College, Kentucky 

Georgetown College, Kentucky , . 

University of Kentucky 

Transylvania College, Kentucky 

University of Louisville, Kentucky 

Bethel College, Kentucky 

H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College, 

Louisiana 

Loyola University, Louisiana 

Bowdoin College, Maine - 

Bates College, Maine 

University of Maine 

St. John's College, Maryland 

Goucher College, Maryland 

Johns Hopkins University, Maryland . . 

Morgan College (colored), Maryland 

Washington College, Maryland 

Rockhill College, Maryland 

Hood College, Maryland 

Maryland College for Women 

Amherst College, Massachusetts 

Boston University, Massachusetts 

Harvard University, Massachusetts 

Smith College, Massachusetts 

Wheaton College, Massachusetts 

Mount Holyoke College, Massachusetts . 

Tufts College, Massachusetts 

Clark College, Massachusetts 



Number 
of depart- 
ments. 



Institutions. 



Alrua College, Michigan 

University of Michigan 

St. John's University, Minnesota 

Augsburg Seminary, Minnesota 

Carelton College, Minnesota 

Hamline University, Minnesota 

Macalester College, Minnesota 

College of St. Catherine, Minnesota 

Gustavus Adolphus College, Minnesota. . 

College of St. Teresa, Minnesota 

Mississippi College 

Meridian College, Mississippi 

University of Mississippi 

Stephens College, Missouri 

Westminster College, Missouri 

William Jewell College, Missouri 

Park College, Missouri 

Lindenwood College, Missouri 

Forest Park College, Missouri 

St. Louis University ,_ Missouri 

Washington University, Missouri 

Drury College, Missouri 

Central Wesleyan College, Missouri 

University of Montana 

Bellevue College, Nebraska 

Lnion College, Nebraska 

Doane College, Nebraska 

University of Nebraska 

New Hampshire College of Agriculture 
and Mechanic Arts 

College of St. Elizabeth, New Jersey 

Upsala College, New Jersey 

University of New Mexico 

New York State College for Teachers 

Alfred University, New York 

St. Stephen's University, New York 

Wells College, New York 

St. Lawrence University, New York 

Elmira College, New York 

Hobart College, New York 

College of New Rochelle, New York 

Barnard College, New York 

Columbia University, New York 

College of the City of New York 

Hunter College of the City of New York. 

New York University 

Vassar College, New York 

University of Rochester, New York 

Union University, New York 

University of North Carolina. 

Davidson College, North Carolina 

Trinity College, North Carolina 

Elon College, North Carolina 

Guilford College, North Carolina 

Shaw University (colored), North Caro- 
lina 

Weaver College, North Carolina 

Salem Academy and College, North Caro- 
lina 

University of North Dakota 

Municipal University of Akron, Ohio 

Ohio University 

Baldwin Wallace College, Ohio 

Bluffton College, Ohio 

Cedarville College, Ohio 

University of Cincinnati, Ohio 

Western Reserve University, Ohio 

Capital University, Ohio 

St. Mary- College, Ohio 

Defiance College, Ohio 

Ohio Wesleyan University 

Kenyon College, Ohio 

Marietta College, Ohio .'. 

Muskingum College, Ohio 

Miami University, Ohio 

Oxford College for Women, Ohio 

Western College for Women, Ohio 



Number 
of depart- 
ments. 



RESOURCES' AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 53 

Table 4. — Institutions having eleven specified departments or fewer, 1915-16 — Contd, 



Institutions. 



Lake Erie College, Ohio 

Rio Grande College, Ohio * 

Otterbein University, Ohio 

College of Wooster, Ohio 

Methodist University of Oklahoma 

Kingfisher College, Oklahoma 

University of Oklahoma 

Albany College, Oregon 

Pacific University, Oregon 

McMinnville College, Oregon 

Pacific College, Oregon 

Reed College, Oregon 

Willamette University, Oregon 

Moravian College, Pennsylvania 

Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania 

Beaver College, Pennsylvania 

Wilson College, Pennsylvania 

Lafayette College, Pennsylvania 

Pennsylvania College 

Haverford College, Pennsylvania. ^. 

Franklin and Marshall College, Penn- 
sylvania 

Lincoln University (colored), Pennsyl- 
vania 

Allegheny College, Pennsylvania 

Irving Female College, Pennsylvania 

Albright College, Pennsylvania 

Westminster College, Pennsylvania 

Drexel Institute, Pennsylvania 

University of Pennsylvania 

Susquehanna University, Pennsylvania. 

Pennsylvania State College 

Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania 

Washington and Jefferson College, Penn- 
sylvania 

Waynesburg College, Pennsylvania 

College of Charleston, South Carolina 

Columbia College, South Carolina 

University of South Carolina 

Furman University, South Carolina.. . . . 

Converse College, South Carolina 

Wofford College, South Carolina 

University of South Dakota 

King College, Tennessee 

University of Chattanooga, Tennessee . . . 



Number 
of depart- 
ments. 



Institutions. 



Tusculum College, Tennessee 

Knoxville College (colored), Tennessee.. 

Milligan College, Tennessee 

Tennessee College 

George Peabody College- for Teachers, 
Tennessee 

Fisk University (colored), Tennessee... 

Vanderbilt University, Tennessee 

University of the South, Tennessee 

University of Texas 

Howard Payne College, Texas 

Rice Institute, Texas 

Austin College, Texas 

Baylor University, Texas 

University of Utah 

Middlebury College, Vermont 

St. Michael's College, Vermont 

Bridgewater College, Virginia 

University of Virginia 

Roanoke Institute, Virginia 

Emory and Henry College, Virginia 

Hampden-Sidney College, Virginia 

Hollins College, Virginia 

Washington and Lee University, Vir- 
ginia 

Randolph- Macon Woman's College, 
Virginia. 

Richmond College, Virginia 

Virginia Union University (colored) 

College of William and Mary (Virginia) . . 

University of Washington 

Spokane College, Washington 

Davis andElkins College, West Virginia. 

Lawrence College, Wisconsin 

Beloit College, Wisconsin 

University of Wisconsin 

Milton College, Wisconsin 

Concordia College, Wisconsin 

Milwaukee-Downer College, Wisconsin.. 

Mission House, Wisconsin 

Campion College, Wisconsin 

Ripon College, Wisconsin 

St. Clara College and Academy, Wiscon- 



Number 
of depart- 
ments. 



4 
3 

11 

11 

11 

10 

11 

9 

11 

11 

11 

7 

7 

11 



11 
9 



11 

11 

11 

6 

7 
11 



11 

11 
11 
6 

5 
11 



11 
11 



SIZE OF FACULTY. 

Suggested Requirement IV. — A college of arts and sciences should 
have a faculty of at least 15 members devoting full time to college 
work. 

The ratio of instructors to students is also a significant factor in 
college efficiency. It will be noted that the strongest institutions 
provide one instructor to every 12 or 10 or even smaller number of 
students. 



54 



RESOURCES AND' STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



Table 5. — Number of faculty members devoting full time to college instruction- 
Number of college students, 1915-16. 



Institutions. 



University of Alabama 

University of Arizona '. 

Central College, Arkansas 

Hendrix College, Arkansas 

Pomona College, California 

Occidental College, California 

Mills College, California 

University of Redlands, California 

University of Santa Clara, California 

Leland Stanford Junior University, California 

University of Colorado 

Colorado College 

University of Denver, Colorado 

Trinity College, Connecticut 

Yale University, Connecticut 

Gallaudet College, District of Columbia 

George Washington University, District of Columbia. 
Howard University (colored), District of Columbia.. . 

University of Florida 

Columbia College, Florida. 

Florida State College for Women 

University of Georgia 

Atlanta University (colored), Georgia 

Cox College, Georgia 

North Georgia Agricultural College 

Agnes Scott College, Georgia 

Piedmont College, Georgia 

Bessie Tift College, Georgia 

Brenau College, Georgia 

Emory University, Georgia 

Shorter College, Georgia 

University of Idaho 

Aurora College, Illinois 

Illinois Wesleyan University 

Blackburn College, Illinois 

De Paul University, Illinois 

Loyola University, Illinois 

James Millikin University, Illinois 

Knox College, Illinois 

Illinois Woman's College 

Lake Forest College, Illinois 

Frances Shimer School, Illinois 

Northwestern College, Illinois 

Roekford College, Illinois 

Augustana College, Illinois 

Indiana University 

Wabash College, Indiana 

Earlham College, Indiana . 

Franklin College, Indiana 

De Pauw University, Indiana 

Butler College, Indiana 

University of Notre Dame, Indiana 

Taylor University, Indiana 

Iowa State Teachers College 

Coe College, Iowa 

Wartburg College, Iowa 

Des Moines College, Iowa 

Drake University, Iowa 

Parsons College, Iowa 

State University of Iowa 

Cornell College, Iowa 

Central University of Iowa 

Morningside College, Iowa 

Buena Vista College, Iowa 

Midland College, Kansas 

College of Emporia, Kansas 

Ottawa University, Kansas 

Kansas Wesleyan University 

Cooper College, Kansas 

Washburn College, Kansas 

Southwestern College, Kansas 

Ogden College, Kentucky 

Centre College, Kentucky 

Georgetown College, Kentucky 

University of Kentucky 



Faculty. 



24 
28 
15 
13 
45 
22 
34 
14 
2 

145 
76 
35 
28 
25 

104 
16 
38 
24 
17 
15 
21 
31 



C 1 ) 



9 
28 
11 
25 
16 
16 
12 
40 

6 
15 

4 
13 
12 
39 
26 
12 
20 

1 
11 
28 

7 
233 
21 
34 
10 
36 
20 
70 
26 
67 
43 

2 
10 
31 
12 
148 
23 

6 
16 

4 
12 
18 
11 
18 
10 
18 
21 

6 

12 
21 
28 



Students. 




406 
209 

244 
241 
195 


58 

93 
1,644 
402 
173 
270 
235 
\',483 

48 
476 
262 
•96 

46 



278 

39 


83 


22 





244 



134 

39 
124 

45 

36 

121 

131 

233 



102 



160 



136 

1,701 

334 

170 

123 

367 

168 

274 

65 
240 
230 

28 

96 
260 

81 
812 
•234 

29 
155 

29 

45 
120 

94 

84 

57 
196 
152 

50 
147 
157 
162 



141 

55 

25 

299 

138 

187 

119 



556 

448 

354 

310 





30 
263 

71 


47 

153 



16 

102 

1 

299 

23 
166 
198 

160 
223 

32 
119 

27 
324 

205 
208 
176 

92 

33 

91 
217 

61 
968 

202 
131 
378 
249 


49 

1,579 

257 



129 

229 

74 
765 
310 

31 
221 
. 36 

55 
123 
110 

90 

59 
225 
124 


109 
156 



494 
350 

55 
269 
540 
333 
187 
177 

93 
2,200 
850 
527 
580 
235 
1,483 

78 
739 
333 

96 

93 
153 
278 

55 
102 

84 
299 

45 
166 
198 
244 
160 
357 

71 
243 

72 
360 
121 
336 
441 
176 
194 

33 
251 
217 
197 
2,669 
334 
372 
254 
745 
417 
274 
114 
1,819 
487 

28 
225 
489 
155 
1,577 
544 

60 
376 

65 
100 
243 
204 
174 
116 
421 
276 

50 
147 
266 
318 



None reported devoting full time to college instruction. 



BESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



55 



Table 5. — Number of faculty members devoting full time to college instruction — 
Number of college students, 1915-16 — Continued. 



Institutions. 



Transylvania College, Kentucky 

University of Louisville, Kentucky 

Bethel College, Kentucky 

H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College, Louisiana 

Loyola University, Louisiana 

Bowdoin College, Maine 

Bates College, Maine 

University of Maine 

St. John's College, Maryland 

Goucher College, Maryland ■ 

Johns Hopkins University, Maryland 

Morgan College (colored), Maryland ■ 

Washington College, Maryland 

Rock Hill College, Maryland 

Hood College, Maryland 

Maryland College for Women 

Amherst College, Massachusetts 

Boston University, Massachusetts 

Harvard University, Massachusetts - 

Smith College, Massachusetts 

Wheaton College, Massachusetts 

Mount Holyoke College, Massachusetts 

Tufts College, Massachusetts 

Clark College, Massachusetts 

Alma College, Michigan 

University of Michigan 

St. Johns University, Minnesota 

Augsburg Seminary, Minnesota 

Carleton College, Minnesota 

Hamline University, Minnesota , 

Macalester College, Minnesota 

College of St. Catherine, Minnesota 

Gustavus Adolphus College, Minnesota 

College of St. Teresa, Minnesota 

Mississippi College 

Meridian College, Mississippi 

University of Mississippi 

Stephens College, Missouri 

Westminster College, Missouri 

William Jewell College, Missouri 

Park College, Missouri 

Lindenwood Female College, Missouri 

Forest Park College, Missouri 

St. Louis University, Missouri 

Washington University, Missouri 

Drury College, Missouri 

Central Wesleyan College, Missouri 

University of Montana 

Bellevue College, Nebraska 

Union College, Nebraska 

Doane College, Nebraska 

University of Nebraska 

New Hampshire College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. 

College of St. Elizabeth, New Jersey 

Upsala College, New Jersey 

University of New Mexico 

New York State College for Teachers 

Alfred University, New York * 

St. Stephens College, New York 

Wells College, New York 

St. Lawrence University, New York 

Elmira College, New York 

Hobart College, New York 

College of New Rochelle, New York 

Barnard College, New York 

Columbia University, New York 

College of the City of New York 

Hunter College of the City of New York 

New York University 

Vassar College, New York 

University of Rochester, New York , 

Union University, New York 

University of North Carolina 

Davidson College, North Carolina 

Trinity College, North Carolina 

Elon College, North Carolina 

Guilford College, North Carolina 



Students. 



Faculty 



Men. Women. 



26 
24 

5 
29 
10 
28 
>y 
56 
10 
35 
49 

3 

9 
11 
11 

8 
47 
29 



130 
27 
88 
33 
28 
19 
266 
13 

2 
35 
18 
22 
34 

8 
26 
12 
17 
20 
12 

5 
10 
15 



(0 

( x ) 



23 
70 
15 
18 
40 
7 
14 
16 
89 
31 
30 
3 

16 

46 

28 

6 

31 

16 

32 

26 

21 

88 

133 

128 

118 

47 

112 

45 

40 

52 

13 

28 

18 

11 



163 

129 

30 



45 

400 

284 

185 

100 



195 

27 

82 

40 





422 

104 









216 

177 

88 

298 

200 

31 

211 

224 

159 



102 



324 

104 

547 



119 

279 

119 





223 

232 

140 

60 

149 

30 

64 

70 

940 

123 



8 

81 

164 

76 

52 



132 



138 





1,256 

2,229 



278 



306 

521 

• 544 

357 

428 

199 

84 



216 


273 



188 

81 



508 



22 

7 



128 

89 



348 



1,725 

206 

783 





90 

1,127 





235 

194 

137 

221 

64 

104 



278 

84 

145 





142 

86 

30 



309 

147 

35 

238 

37 

51 

63 

926 

113 

110 

6 

66 

855 

83 



202 

137 

278 

98 

193 

694 





1,943 



1,127 

224 



5' 



89 

102 

51 



Total. 



251 

345 

30 

273 

45 

400 

472 

266 

100 

508 

195 

49 

89 

40 

128 

89 

422 

452 



1,725 
206 
783 
216 
177 
178 
1,425 
200 

31 
446 
418 
296 
221 
166 
104 
324 
382 
631 
145 
119 
279 
261 

86 

30 
223 
541 
287 

95 
387 

67 
115 
133 
1,866 
236 
110 

14 

147 

1,019 

159 

52 

202 

269 

278 

236 

193 

694 

1,256 

2,229 

1,943 

278 

1,127 

530 

521 

549 

357 

517 

301 

135 



i None reported devoting full time to college instruction. 



56 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OP COLLEGES. 



Table 5. — Number of faculty members devoting full time to college instruction- 
Number of college students, 1915-16 — Continued. 



Institutions^ 




Shaw University (colored), North Carolina 

Weaver College, North Carolina 

Salem Academy and College, North Carolina 

University of North Dakota 

Municipal University of Akron, Ohio 

Ohio University 

Baldwin-Wallace College, Ohio 

Bluflton College, Ohio 

Cedarville College, Ohio 

University of Cincinnati, Ohio 

Western Reserve University, Ohio 

Capital University, Ohio 

St. Mary College, Ohio 

Defiance College, Ohio 

Ohio Wesleyan University 

Kenyon College, Ohio 

Marietta College, Ohio 

Muskingum College, Ohio 

Miami University, Ohio 

Oxford College for Women, Ohio 

Western College for Women, Ohio 

Lake Erie College, Ohio 

Rio Grande College, Ohio 

Otterbein University, Ohio -• 

Collegeof Wooster, Ohio 

Methodist University of Oklahoma 

Kingfisher College, Oklahoma 

University of Oklahoma 

Albany College, Oregon 

Pacific University, Oregon 

McMinnville College, Oregon 

Pacific College 1 , Oregon 

Reed College, Oregon 

Willamette University, Oregon 

Moravian College, Pennsylvania 

Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania 

Beaver College, Pennsylvania 

Wilson College, Pennsylvania 

Lafayette College, Pennsylvania 

Pennsylvania College. 

Haver ford College, Pennsylvania 

Franklin and Marshall College, Pennsylvania 

Lincoln University (colored), Pennsylvania 

Allegheny College, Pennsylvania 

Irving Female College, Pennsylvania 

Albright College, Pennsylvania 

Westminster College, Pennsylvania 

Drexel Institute, Pennsylvania 

University of Pennsylvania 

Susquehanna University, Pennsylvania 

Pennsylvania State College 

Swarthmore Col lege, Pennsylvania 

Washington and Jefferson College, Pennsylvania. 

Waynesburg College, Pennsylvania 

College of Charleston, South Carolina 

Columbia College, South Carolina 

University of South Carolina 

Furman University, South Carolina 

Converse College, South Carolina 

Wofford College, South Carolina 

University of South Dakota 

King College, Tennessee 

University of Chattanooga, Tennessee 

Tusculum College, Tennessee 

Knoxville College (colored), Tennessee 

Milligan College, Tennessee 

Tennessee College 

George Peabody College for Teachers, Tennessee. 

Fisk University (colored), Tennessee 

Vanderbilt University, Tennessee 

University of the South, Tennessee 

University of Texas 

Howard Payne College, Texas 

Rice Institute, Texas 

Austin College, Texas 

Baylor University, Texas 



0) 



2 
20 
49 
21 
35 
19 
14 

4 

236 

79 

6 
16 
13 
58 
14 
18 
33 
31 
19 
32 
21 

3 
13 
29 

7 

7 
63 

9 
20 

8 

4 
19 
13 

8 
43 

6 
24 
50 
26 
25 
16 
13 
25 
10 

4 
20 
64 
154 
22 
93 
39 
32 
11 

8 
19 
32 
11 
12 
13 
34 

6 

9 

5 



(0 



9 

4 

100 

18 

35 

18 

117 

7 
41 

8 
66 



Students. 



27 



166 

143 

401 

136 

52 

35 

501 

408 

118 

70 

99 

545 

151 

186 

150 

339 







30 

164 

296 

36 

35 

797 

31 

54 

50 

22 

110 

112 

41 







477 

317 

186 

291 

163 

241 



131 

108 

150 

638 

128 

332 

127 

333 

49 

80 



323 

205 



324 

150 

60 

108 

45 

26 

98 



413 

95 

260 

160 

882 

65 

264 

108 

248 



110 

6 

189 

116 

73 

219 

108 

64 

33 

880 

435 





116 

464 



69 

108 

170 

188 

263 

133 

25 

112 

215 

28 

16 

776 

31 

53 

39 

26 

147 

118 



453 

50 

172 



14 







164 

31 

28 

84 

391 

380 

28 

42 

237 



55 



123 

32 



153 



223 



7.7 

48 

15 

42 

94 

1,099 

84 

72 



811 

49 

119 



26S 



198 

33 
189 
282 
216 
620 
244 
116 

68 

1,381 

843 

118 

70 
215 
1,009 
151 
255 
258 
509 
188 
263 
133 

55 
276 
511 

64 

41 
1,573 

62 
107 

89 

48 
257 
230 

41 
453 

50 
172 
477 
331 
186 
291 
163 
405 

31 
159 
192 
541 
1,018 
156 
374 
364 
333 
104 

80 
123 
355 
205 
153 
324 
373 

60 
185 

93 

41 
140 

94 
1,512 
179 
332 
160 
1,693 
114 
383 
108 
511 



i None reported devoting full time to colleje instructiom. 



BESOUECES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



57 



Table 5. — Number of faculty members devoting full time to college instruction — 
Number of college students 1915-16 — Continued. 



Institutions. 



University of Utah 

Middleburg College, Vermont 

St. Michael's College, Vermont 

Bridge water College, Virginia 

University of Virginia 

Roanoke Institute, Virginia 

Emory and Henry College, Virginia 

Hampden-Sidney College, Virginia 

Hollins College, Virginia 

Washington and Lee University, Virginia 

Randolph-Macon Woman's College, Virginia . 

Richmond College, Virginia 

Virginia Union University (colored) 

College of William and Mary, Virginia 

University of Washington 

Spokane College, Washington 

Davis and Elkins College, West Virginia 

Lawrence College, Wisconsin 

Beloit College, Wisconsin 

University of Wisconsin 

Milton College, Wisconsin 

Concordia College, Wisconsin 

Milwaukee-Downer College, Wisconsin 

Mission-House, Wisconsin 

Campion College, Wisconsin 

Ripon College, Wisconsin 

St. Clara College and Academy, Wisconsin . . . 



Faculty. 



37 
30 

5 
11 
59 

8 
10 
10 
12 
28 
46 
29 

9 

13 

124 



0) 



18 

35 

41 

276 

7 

1 
35 

9 
13 
25 

8 



Students. 



Men. Women. Total 



764 

187 

20 

42 

523 

31 

176 

118 



369 



268 

62 

178 

813 

2 

34 

294 

246 

1.692 

33 

54 



38 

16fe 




838 

156 



30 









106 



624 

117 

7 



1,042 

8 

22 

270 

142 

1,109 

39 



234 

1 



94 

69 



1,602 

343 

20 

72 

523 

31 

176 

118 

106 

369 

624 

385 

69 

178 

1,855 

10 

56 

564 

388 

2,801 

72 

54 

234 

39 

80 

259 

69 



1 None reported devoting full time to college instruction. 

SEPARATION OF COLLEGE AND PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT. 

Suggested Requirement V. — If a college of arts and sciences main- 
tains an academy or preparatory department, this department should 
be " distinct in students, faculty, and discipline." Exception may 
be made, as noted above, of certain denominational institutions 
whose traditions and policy require the inclusion of secondary edu- 
cation with collegiate education under the same institutional control. 
In such cases the preparatory department should be administratively 
separated from the college department. 

Table 6. — Faculty and number giving part time to preparatory work, 1915-16. 



Institutions. 



University of Alabama 

University of Arizona 

Central College, Arkansas 

Hendrix College, Arkansas 

Pomona College, California 

Occidental College, California 

Mills College, California 

University of Redlands, California. 
University of Santa Clara, California. 
Leland Stanford Junior University, 

California 

University of Colorado 

Colorado College 

University of Denver, Colorado 

Trinity College, Connecticut 

Yale University, Connecticut 





Num- 




ber giv- 


Fac- 
ulty. 


ing part 


time to 
prepar- 




atory 




work. 


24 





28 





18 


3 


13 





45 





22 





34 





20 


6 


8 


2 


145 





76 





35 





31 


3 


25 





104 






Institutions. 



Gallaudet College, District of Colum- 
bia 

George Washington University, Dis- 
trict of Columbia 

Howard University (colored), Dis- 
trict of Columbia 

University of Florida 

Columbia College, Florida 

Florida State College for Women 

University of Georgia 

Atlanta University (colored), 
Georgia 

Cox College, Georgia. 

North Georgia Agriculture College . . 

Agnes Scott College, Georgia 

Piedmont College, Georgia 



Fac- 
ulty. 



16 

38 

25 
17 
20 
21 
31 

17 
11 
14 
28 
16 



Num- 
ber giv- 
ing part 
time to 
prepar- 
atory 
work. 







1 

5 



17 
3 
5 

5 



58 RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 

Table 6. — Faculty and number giving -part time to preparatory work, 1915-16 — Contd. 



Institutions. 



Bessie Tift College,/ Georgia 

Brenau College , Georgia 

Emory University, Georgia 

Shorter College, Georgia 

University of Idaho 

■ Aurora College, Illinois 

Illinois Wesleyan College 

Blackburn College, Illinois 

De Paul University, Illinois 

Loyola University, Illinois 

James Milllkin University, Illinois . . 

Knox College, Illinois 

Illinois "Woman's College * . 

Lake Forest College, Illinois 

Frances Shimer School, Illinois 

Northwestern College, Illinois 

Rockford College, Illinois 

Augustana College, Illinois 

Indiana University 

"Wabash College, Indiana 

Earlham College, Indiana 

Franklin College, Indiana 

De Pauw University, Indiana 

Butler College, Indiana 

University of Notre Dame, Indiana. 

Taylor University, Indiana 

Iowa State Teachers College 

Coe College, Iowa 

Wartburg College, Iowa 

Des Moines College, Iowa 

Drake University, Iowa 

Parsons College, Iowa 

State University of Iowa 

Cornell College, Iowa 

Central University of Iowa 

Morningside College, Iowa 

Buena Vista College, Iowa 

Midland College, Kansas 

College of Emporia, Kansas 

Ottawa University, Kansas 

Kansas Wesleyan University 

Cooper College, Kansas 

Washburn College, Kansas 

Southwestern College, Kansas ...... 

Ogden College, Kentucky 

Centre College, Kentucky 

Georgetown College, Kentucky 

University of Kentucky 

Transylvania College, Kentucky 

University of Louisville, Kentucky . 

Bethel College, Kentucky 

H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial Col- 
lege, Louisiana 

Loyola University, Louisiana 

Bowdoin College, Maine 

Bates College, Maine 

University of Maine 

St. John's College, Maryland.. 

Goucher College, Maryland 

Johns Hopkins University, Mary 
land 

Morgan College (colored) , Maryland . 

"Washington College, Maryland. . 

Hock Hill College, Maryland 

Hood College, Maryland 

Maryland College for Women 

Amherst College, Massachusetts 

Boston University, Massachusetts. 

Harvard University, Massachusetts 

Smith College, Massachusetts 

"Wheaton College, Massachusetts. .. 

Mount Holyoke College, Massachu- 
setts 



Fac- 
ulty. 



25 
16 
16 
12 
40 
12 
18 
12 
20 
18 
39 
26 
16 
20 
18 
12 
28 
14 
233 
21 
34 
18 
37 
20 
80 
21 
98 
43 

9 
12 
31 
12 
148 
31 
17 
19 
10 
18 
18 
11 
23 
10 
24 
24 

8 
12 
26 
28 
26 
24 

6 

29 
10 
28 
28 
56 
13 
35 

49 
8 
9 
15 
15 
11 
47 
29 



130 
27 



Num- 
ber giv- 
ing part 
time to 
prepar- 
atory 
work. 




4 


17 
1 

7 


8 
1 



10 


31 

7 
2 



8 

11 
3 
G 
6 


5 

6 
3 
2 

5 




1 






2 



5 

4 
4 
3 

. 







Institution. 



Tufts College, Massachusetts 

Clark College, Massachusetts 

Alma College, Michigan 

University of Michigan 

St. John's University, Minnesota. . 

Augsburg Seminary, Minnesota 

Carleton College, Minnesota 

Hamline University, Minnesota . . . 

Macalester College, Minnesota 

College of St. Catherine, Minnesota. 

Gustavus Adolphus College, Minne- 
sota 

College of St. Teresa, Minnesota. . . 

Mississippi College 

Meridian College, Mississippi 

University of Mississippi 

Stephens College, Missouri 

Westminster College, Missouri 

William Jewell College, Missouri 

Park College, Missouri 

Lindenwood Female College, Mis- 
souri 

Forest Park College, Missouri 

St. Louis University, Missouri. 

Washington University, Missouri. . . 

Drury College, Missouri 

Central Wesleyan College, Missouri. . 

University of Montana 

Bellevue College, Nebraska 

Union College, Nebraska 

Doane College, Nebraska 

University of Nebraska 

New Hampshire College of Agricul- 
ture and Mechanic Arts 

College of Saint Elizabeth, New 
Jersey 

Upsala College, New Jersey 

University of New Mexico 

New York State College for Teachers 

Alfred University, New York 

St. Stephen's College, New York... 

Wells College, New York 

St. Lawrence University, New York 

Elmira College, New York 

Hobart College, New York 

College of New Rochelle, New York. 

Barnard College, New York 

Columbia University, New York . . . 

College of the City of New York 

Hunter College of the City of New 
York 

New York University 

Vassar College, New York 

University of Rochester, New York. 

Union University, New York 

University of North Carolina 

Davidson College, North Carolina... 

Trinity College, North Carolina 

Elon College, North Carolina 

Guilford College, North Carolina 

Shaw University (colored), North 
Carolina 

Weaver College, North Carolina 

Salem Academy and College, North 
Carolina 

University of North Dakota 

Municipal University of Akron, 
Ohio 

Ohio University 

Baldwin- Wallace College, Ohio 

Bluflton College, Ohio 

Cedarville College, Ohio 

University of Cincinnati, Ohio 



Fac- 
ulty. 



Num- 
ber giv- 
ing part 
time to 
prepar- 
atory 
work. 



248 
28 
19 

266 
18 
18 
35 
18 
22 
35 

15 
41 
12 
17 
20 
16 
13 
16 
19 

12 
24 
26 
70 
15 
23 
40 
14 
26 
18 
95 

31 

34 

12 

20 

52 

28 

9 

31 

16 

32 

26 

22 

88 

133 

142 

118 

47 
112 
45 
40 
52 
13 
28 
27 
17 

29 



35 
55 

21 
36 
19 
16 

7 
236 



EESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 59 

Table 6. — Faculty and number giving -part time to preparatory work, 1915-16 — Contd. 



Institutions. 



Fac- 
ulty. 



Western Reserve "University, Ohio. . 

Capital University, Ohio 

St. Mary College, Ohio 

Defiance College, Ohio 

Ohio Wesleyan University 

Kenyon College, Ohio 

Marietta College, Ohio 

Muskingum College , Ohio 

Miami University, Ohio 

Oxford College for Women, Ohio 

Western College for Women, Ohio. . 

Lake Erie College, Ohio 

Rio Grande College, Ohio 

Otterbein University, Ohio 

College of Wooster, Ohio 

Methodist University of Oklahoma. 

Kingfisher College, Oklahoma 

University of Oklahoma 

Albany College, Oregon 

Pacific University, Oregon 

McMinnville College, Oregon 

Pacific College, Oregon 

Reed College, Oregon 

Willamette University, Oregon 

Moravian College, Pennsylvania 

Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania. . 

Beaver College, Pennsylvania 

Wilson College, Pennsylvania 

Lafayette College, Pennsylvania 

Pennsylvania College 

Haverford College, Pennsylvania . . . 

Franklin and Marshall College, 
Pennsylvania 

Lincoln University (colored), Penn- 
sylvania 

Allegheny College, Pennsylvania . . . 

Irving Female College, Pennsyl- 
vania 

Albright College, Pennsylvania 

Westminster College, Pennsylvania. 

Drexel Institute, Pennsylvania 

University of Pennsylvania 

Susquehanna University, Penn- 
sylvania 

Pennsylvania State College 

Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania. 

Washington and Jefferson College, 
Pennsylvania 

Waynesburg College, Pennsylvania. 

College of Charleston, South Caro- 
lina 

Columbia College, South Carolina. . 

University of South Carolina 

Furman University, South Caro- 
lina 



79 

14 

16 

16 

59 

14 

18. 

38 

31 

19 

32 

21 

10 

17 

32 

9 

9 
63 
13 
20 
16 
10 
19 
13 

8 
43 

8 
24 
50 
26 
25 

16 

13 
25 

19 
10 
20 
69 
154 

23 
93 
39 

32 
11 



11 



Num- 
ber giv- 
ing part 
time to 
prepar- 
atory 
work. 



Institutions. 



Fac- 
ulty. 



Num- 
ber giv- 
ing part 
time to 
prepar- 
atory 
work. 



Converse College, South Carolina. . 

Wofford College, South Carolina... 

University of South Dakota 

King College, Tennessee 

University of Chattanooga, Ten- 
nessee .' 

Tusculum College, Tennessee 

Knoxville College (colored), Ten- 
nessee 

Milligan College, Tennessee 

Tennessee College 

George Peabody College for Teach- 
ers, Tennessee 

Fisk U niversity (colored), Tennessee 

Vanderbilt University, Tennessee.. 

University of the South, Tennessee. 

University of Texas 

Howard Payne College, Texas 

Rice Institute, Texas 

Austin College, Texas 

Baylor University, Texas 

University of Utah 

Middlebury College, Vermont 

St. Michael's College, Vermont 

Bridgewater College, Virginia 

University of Virginia 

Roanoke institute, Virginia 

Emory and Henry College, Virginia. 

Hampden-Sidney College, Virginia. 

Hollins College, Virginia 

Washington and Lee University, 
Virginia 

Randolph- Macon Woman's College, 
Virginia 

Richmond College, Virginia 

Virginia Union University (colored). 

College of William and Mary, Vir- 
ginia 

University of Washington 

Spokane College, Washington 

Davis and Elkins College, West Vir- 
ginia 

Lawrence College, Wisconsin 

Beloit College, Wisconsin 

University of Wisconsin 

Milton College, Wisconsin 

Concordia College, Wisconsin 

Milwaukee- Downer College, Wis- 
consin 

Mission House, Wisconsin 

Campion Collegej Wisconsin 

Ripon College /W isconsin 

St. Clara College and Academy, Wis- 
consin 



13 
13 

36 



10 
6 

100 
32 
35 
18 

117 
7 
41 
10 
66 
37 
30 
11 
13 
59 
8 
10 
10 
12 

28 

46 
29 
12 

^15 

124 

6 

29 
35 
41 
283 
14 
9 

35 

9 

15 

25 

14 



14 








3 

2 

6 

11 




7 
7 



ADVANCED DEGREES OF FACULTY MEMBERS. 

Suggested Requirement VI. — Members of the faculty of a college of 
arts and sciences should have pursued graduate study in addition 
to the bachelor's degree. At least one-fourth of the faculty should 
hold the degree of doctor of philosophy or degrees representing 
equivalent scholarly attainments hestowed by reputable graduate 
schools. At least three-fourths of the faculty should have secured 
the master's degree in course at a reputable graduate school. 



60 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



Table 7. — Faculty — Number holding bachelor's degree, master' s degree, and doctor's 
degree (excluding honorary degrees), 1915-16. 



Institutions. 



Total 
number 
of mem- 
bers of 
faculty. 



Number 

holding 

only 

bachelor's 
degree 



Number 
holding 
master's 

degree 
and none 

higher. 



Number 
holding 
doctor's 
degree 
(exclud- 
ing hon- 
orary 
degrees). 



University of Alabama 

University of Arizona 

Central College, Arkansas 

Hendrix College, Arkansas 

Pomona College, California 

Occidental College, California 

Mills College, California 

University of Redlands, California 

University of Santa Clara, California 

Leland Stanford Junior University, California 

University of Colorado 

Colorado College 

University of Denver, Colorado 

Trinity College, Connecticut 

Yale University, Connecticut 

Gallaudet College, District of Columbia 

George Washington University, District of Columbia 
Howard University (colored), District of Columbia... 

University of Florida 

Columbia College, Florida 

Florida State College for Women 

University of Georgia 

Atlanta University (colored), Georgia 

Cox College, Georgia 

North Georgia Agricultural College 

Agnes Scott College, Georgia 

Piedmont College, Georgia , 

Bessie Tift College, Georgia 

Brenau College, Georgia 

Emory University, Georgia 

Shorter College, Georgia 

University of Idaho 

Aurora College, Illinois 

Illinois Wesleyan University 

Blackburn College, Illinois 

De Paul University, Illinois 

Loyola University, Illinois 

James Millikin University, Illinois 

Knox College, Illinois 

Illinois Woman's College 

Lake Forest College, Illinois 

Frances Shimer School, Illinois 

Northwestern College, Illinois 

Rockford College, Illinois , 

Augustana College, Illinois 

Indiana University 

Wabash College, Indiana 

Earlham College, Indiana 

Franklin College, Indiana 

De Pauw University, Indiana 

Butler College, Indiana 

University of Notre Dame, Indiana 

Taylor University, Indiana 

Iowa State Teachers College 

Coe College, Iowa 

Wartburg College, Iowa 

Des Moines College, Iowa 

Drake University, Iowa 

Parsons College, Iowa 

State University of Iowa 

Cornell College, Iowa 

Cencral University of Iowa 

Morningside College, Iowa 

Buena Vista College, Iowa 

Midland College, Kansas 

College of Emporia, Kansas 

Ottawa University, Kansas 

Kansas Wesleyan University 

Cooper College, Kansas 

Washburn College, Kansas 

Southwestern College, Kansas 

Ogden College, Kentucky 

Centre College, Kentucky 



24 
28 
18 
13 
45 
22 
34 
20 
8 

145 
76 
35 
31 
25 

104 
16 
38 
25 
17 
20 
21 
31 
17 
11 
14 
28 
16 
25 
16 
16 
12 
40 
12 
18 
12 
20 
18 
39 
26 
16 
20 
18 
12 
28 
14 

233 
21 
34 
18 
37 
20 
80 
21 
98 
43 
9 
12 
31 
12 

148 
31 
17 
19 
10 
18 
18 
11 
23 
10 
24 
24 
8 
12 



10 
3 
6 

12 

6 
7 
6 



37 

23 

14 

11 
9 

16 
6 
9 

11 
2 
1 
5 

13 
3 
9 
2 

13 
2 
2 
8 
4 
4 

10 

8 
1 

12 



6 

10 

9 

7 

3 

9 

7 

6 

59 

7 

12 

12 

14 

6 

15 

2 

31 

13 

2 

8 

10 

8 

51 

14 

6 

11 

3 

8 

11 

7 

10 
6 
12 
8 
3 
1 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



61 



Table 7. — Faculty — Number holding bachelor's degree, master's degree, and doctor's 
degree {excluding honorary degrees), 1915-16 — Continued. 



Institutions. 



Total 
number 
of mem- 
bers of 
faculty. 



Number 

holding 

only 

bachelor's 
degree. 



Number 
holding 
master's 
degree 
and none 
higher. 



Number 
holding 
doctor's 



(exclud- 
ing hon- 
orary 
degrees). 



Georgetown College, Kentucky 

University of Kentucky 

Transylvania College, Kentucky 

University of Louisville, Kentucky 

Bethel College, Kentucky 

H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College, Louisiana 

Loyola University, Louisiana 

Bowdoin College, Maine 

Bates College, Maine 

University of Maine 

St. John's College, Maryland 

Goucher College, Maryland 

Johns Hopkins University, Maryland 

Morgan College (colored), Maryland 

Washington College, Maryland 

Rock Hill College, Maryland 

Hood College, Maryland 

Maryland College for Women 

Amherst College, Massachusetts 

Boston University, Massachusetts 

Harvard University, Massachusetts 

Smith College, Massachusetts 

Wheaton College, Massachusetts 

Mount Holyoke College, Massachusetts 

Tufts College, Massachusetts 

Clark College, Massachusetts 

Alma College, Michigan 

University of Michigan 

St. John's University, Minnesota 

Augsburg Seminary, Minnesota i . . . 

Carleton College, Minnesota 

Hamline University, Minnesota 

Macalester College, Minnesota .• 

College of St. Catherine, Minnesota 

Gustavus Adolphus College, Minnesota 

College of St. Teresa, Minnesota 

Mississippi College 

Meridian College, Mississippi 

University of Mississippi 

Stephens College, Missouri 

Westminister College, Missouri 

William Jewell College, Missouri 

Park College, Missouri 

Lindenwood Female College, Missouri 

Forest Park College, Missouri 

St. Louis University, Missouri 

Washington University, Missouri 

Drury College, Missouri 

Central Wesleyan College, Missouri 

University of Montana 

Bellevue College, Nebraska 

Union College, Nebraska 

Doane College, Nebraska 

University of Nebraska 

New Hampshire College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts . 

College of St. Elizabeth, New Jersey 

Upsala College, New Jersey 

University of New Mexico 

New York State College for Teachers 

Alfred University of New York : 

St. Stephen's College, New York 

Wells College, New York 

St. Lawrence University, New York 

Elmira College, New York 

Hobart College, New York 

College of New Rochelle, New York 

Barnard College, New York „ 

Columbia University, New York 

College of the City of New York 

Hunter College of the City of New York 

New York University 

Vassar College, New York 



University of Rochester, New York . 
Union University, New York 



26 
2S 
26 
24 
6 
29 
10 
28 
28 
56 
13 
35 
49 
8- 
9 
15 
15 
11 
47 
29 



130 

27 

88 
248 

28 

19 
266 

18 

18 

35 

18 

22 

35 

15 

41 

12 

17 

20 

16 

13 

16 

19 

12 

24 

26 

70 

15 

23 

40 

14 

26 

18 

95 

31 

34 

12 

20 

52 

28 
9 

31 

16 

32 

26 

22 

88 
133 
142 
118 

47 
112 | 

45 

40 



14 



1 
6 
6 
7 
1 
11 



12 

5 

20 

16 

20 

46 

2 

3 

1 

1 

1 

26 

16 



55 
9 

37 

11 

1.8 

3 

120 



1 

19 
6 
4 
7 
4 
2 
2 

8 

1 
8 
1 
1 
1 



10 
7 
1 

10 
2 

3 

38 
4 
4 

3 

10 
2 
1 
9 
3 



7 

54 
90 
70 
16 
21 
57 
16 
15 



62 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OP COLLEGES. 



Table 7. — Faculty — Number holding bachelor's degree, master's degree, and doctor's 
degree (excluding honorary degrees), 1915-16 — Continued. 



Institutions. 



Total 
number 
of mem- 
bers of 
faculty. 



Number 
holding 

only 

bachelor's 

degree. 



Number 
holding 
master's 

degree 
and none 

higher. 



Number 
holding 
doctor's 
degree 
(exclud- 
ing hon- 
orary 
degrees). 



University of North Carolina. 

Davidson College, North Carolina 

Trinity College, North Carolina , 

Elon College, North Carolina 

Guilford College, North Carolina , 

Shaw University (colored), North Carolina 

Weaver College, North Carolina 

Salem Academy and College, North Carolina 

University of North Dakota 

Municipal University of Akron, Ohio 

Ohio University 

Baldwin- Wallace College, Ohio 

Bluffton College, Ohio.... 

Cedarville College, Ohio 

University of Cincinnati, Ohio 

Western Reserve University, Ohio 

Capital University, Ohio 

St. Mary College, Ohio 

Defiance College, Ohio 

Ohio Wesleyan University 

Kenyon College, Ohio 

Marietta College, Ohio 

Muskingum College, Ohio 

Miami University, Ohio - 

Oxford College for Women, Ohio 

Western College for Women, Ohio 

Lake Erie College, Ohio 

Rio Grande College, Ohio 

Otterbein University, Ohio 

College of Wooster, Ohio 

Methodist University of Oklahoma 

Kingfisher College, Oklahoma 

University of Oklahoma 

Albany College, Oregon 

Pacific University, Oregon 

McMinnville College, Oregon 

Pacific College, Oregon 

Reed College, Oregon 

Willamette University, Oregon 

Moravian College, Pennsylvania 

Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania 

Beaver College, Pennsylvania 

Wilson College, Pennsylvania 

Lafayette College, Pennsylvania 

Pennsylvania College 

Haverford College, Pennsylvania. , 

Franklin and Marshall College, Pennsylvania. . . 

Lincoln University (colored), Pennsylvania 

Allegheny College, Pennsylvania 

Irving Female College, Pennsylvania 

Albright College, Pennsylvania 

Westminster College, Pennsylvania 

Drexel Institute, Pennsylvania 

University of Pennsylvania 

Susquehanna University, Pennsylvania 

Pennsylvania State College 

Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania 

Washington and Jefferson College, Pennsylvania 

Waynesburg College, Pennsylvania 

College of Charleston, South Carolina 

Columbia College, South Carolina 

University of South Carolina 

Furman University, South Carolina 

Converse College, South Carolina 

Wofford College, South Carolina. 

University of South Dakota 

King College, Tennessee 

University of Chattanooga, Tennessee 

Tusculum College, Tennessee. 

Knoxville College (colored), Tennessee 

Milligan College, Tennessee 

Tennessee College 

George Peabody College for Teachers, Tennessee 



52 
13 
28 
27 
17 
29 

8 
35 
55 
21 
36 
19 
16 

7 
236 
79 
14 
16 
16 
59 
14 
18 
38 
31 
19 
32 
21 
10 
17 
32 

9 

9 
63 
13 
20 
16 
10 
19 
13 

8 
43 

8 
24 
50 
26 
25 
16 
13 
25 
19 
10 
20 
69 
154 
23 
93 
39 
32 
11 

8 
21 
32 
11 
13 
13 
36 

8 

9 
11 

8 
10 

6 
100 



4 
1 
7 
5 
9 
7 
3 

17 

11 
5 
6 
4 
9 
7 
4 

79 
3 
2 
4 

15 
1 
5 
6 
7 
4 

12 
6 
4 

i 
n 

4 
3 

20 
1 
7 
6 

10 
3 
1 
2 
1 
1 
8 

23 
6 
2 
2 
7 
4 
2 
2 
2 

25 

14 
4 

23 
8 
3 
2 
3 
2 
6 
2 
4 
2 

11 
1 

5 
4 
2 
2 

23 



21 
4 
9 

11 
7 
1 
2 
2 

15 

10 

15 

11 
7 
4 

18 
9 
7 
4 
6 

20 
5 
2 

11 
8 
1 

10 
9 
3 
7 

12 
3 
5 

24 
8 
5 
3 

3 
7 
1 
3 
7 

10 

11 
7 
5 

10 
5 
9 
5 
6 
7 
9 

23 

11 

42 

10 
7 
8 
3 
7 

12 
3 
5 
5 

14 
6 
5 
2 
4 
5 
3 

21 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



63 



Table 7.— Faculty — Number holding bachelor's degree, master's degree, and doctor's 
degree (excluding honorary degrees), 1915-16 — Continued. 



Institutions. 



Total 
number 
of mem- 
bers of 
faculty. 



Number 

holding 

only 

bachelor's 

degree. 



Number 
holding 
master's 

degree 
and none 

higher. 



Number 
holding 
doctor's 
degree 
(exclud- 
ing hon- 
orary 
degrees). 



Fisk University (colored), Tennessee 

Vanderbilt University, Tennessee 

University of the South, Tennessee 

University of Texas 

Howard Payne College, Texas 

Rice Institute, Texas 

Austin College, Texas 

Baylor University, Texas 

University of Utah •'. . 

Middiebury College, Vermont 

St. Michael's College, Vermont 

Bridgewater College, Virginia 

University of Virginia 

Roanoke Institute, Virginia 

Emory and Henry College, Virginia 

Hampden-Sidney College, Virginia 

Hollins College, Virginia 

Washington and Lee University, Virginia. . . 
Randolph-Macon Woman's College, Virginia 

Richmond College, Virginia 

Virginia Union University (colored) 

College of William and Mary, Virginia 

University of Washington 

Spokane College, Washington 

Davis and Elkins College, West Virginia 

Lawrence College, Wisconsin 

Beloit College, Wisconsin 

University of Wisconsin 

Milton College, Wisconsin 

Concordia College, Wisconsin 

Milwaukee-Downer College, Wisconsin 

Mission House, Wisconsin 

Campion College, Wisconsin 

Ripan College, Wisconsin 

St. Clara College and Academy, Wisconsin. . 



32 

35 

18 

117 

7 
41 
10 
66 
37 
30 
11 
13 
59 

8 
10 
10 
12 
28 
46 
29 
12 
15 
124 

6 
29 
35 
41 
283 
14 

9 
35 

9 
15 
25 
14 



15 
9 
3 

14 
2 

13 
3 

25 

11 

12 
7 
5 

10 
5 
2 
1 
5 
7 

13 
4 
8 
3 

25 
4 
5 
7 
5 

■is 
3 

8 


10 

15 
7 



5 

38 

5 

9 

6 

10 

12 

14 

2 

3 

13 

2 

4 

3 

3 

4 

10 

11 

3 

9 

33 



3 

10 
13 
9s 
9 

8 
3 
2 
6 
3 



2 

18 

9 

59 



18 

1 

6 

9 

6 



3 

21 
1 
4 
4 
3 

14 

12 

14 

1 

3 

61 



1 

16 
22 
138 

1 
4 
2 

4 
1 



64 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 
TEACHING HOURS OF FACULTY. 



Suggested Requirement VII. — Fifteen hours of teaching a week 
should be regarded as the maximum program of a college teacher. 

Table 8. — Faculty — Number of teaching hours, 1915-16 



Institutions. 



University of Alabama 

University of Arizona 

Central College, Arkansas 

Hendrix College, Arkansas 

Pomona College, California 

Occidental College, California. 

Mills College, California '. 

University of Redlands, California 

University of Santa Clara, California 

Leland Standford Junior University, California 

University of Colorado 

Colorado College 

University of Denver, Colorado 

Trinity College, Connecticut 

Yale University, Connecticut 

Gallaudet College, District of Columbia 

George Washington University, District of Columbia 
Howard University (colored), District of Columbia. . 

University of Florida 

Columbia College. Florida 

Florida State College for Women 

University of Georgia 

Atlanta University (colored), Georgia 

Cox College, Georgia 

North Georgia Agricultural College 

Agnes Scott College, Georgia 

Piedmont College, Georgia 

Bessie Tift College, Georgia 

Brenau College, Georgia 

Emory University, Georgia 

Shorter College, Georgia 

University of Idaho 

Aurora College, Illinois '. 

Illinois Wesleyan University 

Blackburn College, Illinois 

De Paul University. Illinois 

Loyola University, Illinois 

James Millikin University, Illinois 

Knox College, Illinois 

Illinois Woman's College 

Lake Forest College, Illinois 

Frances Shimer School, Illinois 

Northwestern College, Illinois 

Rockford College, Illinois 

Augustana College, Illinois 

Indiana University 

Wabash College, Indiana 

Earlham College, Indiana 

Franklin College, Indiana 

De Pauw University, Indiana 

Butler College, Indiana 

University of Notre Dame, Indiana 

Taylor University, Indiana 

Iowa State Teachers College 

Coe College, Iowa , 

Wartburg College, Iowa 

Des Moines College, Iowa 

Drake University, Iowa 

Parsons College, Iowa 

State University of Iowa 

Cornell College, Iowa 

Central University of Iowa 

Morningside College, Iowa 

Buena Vista College, Iowa 

Midland College, Kansas 

College of Emporia, Kansas 



Faculty. 



24 
28 
18 
13 
45 
22 
34 
20 
8 

145 
76 
35 
31 
25 

104 
16 
38 
25 
17 
20 
21 
31 
17 
11 
14 
28 
16 
25 
16 
16 
12 
40 
12 
18 
12 
20 
18 
39 
26 
16 
20 
18 
12 
28 
14 

233 
21 
34 
18 
37 
20 
80 
21 
98 
43 
9 
12 
31 
12 

148 
31 
17 
19 
10 
18 
18 



Average 
number of 
teaching 
hours per 
week for 
those hav- 
ing inde- 
pendent 
charge of 
classes. 



11 

15 
4 
12 
10 
16 
10 
20 
16 
15 
10 
10 



11 
14 
11 
20 
16 
13 
18 
13 
15 
12 
10 



16 
20 
17 
15 
13 
16 



15 
16 
15 
17 
17 



Number 
teaching 
more than 
15 credit 
hours a 
week. 



RESOURCES* AI\ T D' STANDARDS OF COLLEGES! 65 

Table 8. — Faculty — Number of teaching hours, 1915-16 — Continued. 



Institutions. 



Ottawa University. Kansas 

Kansas Wesleyan'University 

Cooper College, Kansas 

Washburn College, Kansas 

Southwestern College, Kansas 

Ogden College, Kentucky 

Centre College of Kentucky 

Georgetown College, Kentucky 

University of Kentucky 

Transylvania College, Kentucky 

University of Louisville, Kentucky 

Bethel College, Kentucky 

H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College, Louisiana 

Loyola University, Louisiana 

Bowdoin College,"Maine 

Bates College, Maine 

University of Maine 

St. John's College, Maryland 

Goucher College, Maryland 

Johns Hopkins University, Maryland 

Morgan College (Colored), Marvland 

Washington College, Marvland 

Rock Hill College, Maryland 

Hood College, Maryland 

Maryland College for Women 

Amherst College, Massachusetts 

Boston University, Massachusetts 

Harvard University, Massachusetts 

Smith College, Massachusetts 

Wheaton College, Massachusetts 

Mount Holyoke College, Massachusetts 

Tufts College, Massachusetts 

Clark College, Massachusetts 

Alma College, Michigan 

University of Michigan 

St. John's University, Minnesota 

Augsburg Seminary, Minnesota 

Carleton College, Minnesota 

Hamline University, Minnesota ' 

Macalester College, Minnesota 

College of St. Catherine, Minnesota 

Gustavus Adolphus College, Minnesota 

College of St. Teresa, Minnesota 

Mississippi College 

Meridian College, Mississippi 

University of Mississippi 

Stephens College, Missouri 

Westminster College, Missouri 

William Jewell College, Missouri 

Park College, Missouri 

Lindenwood Female College, Missouri 

Forest Park College, Missouri 

St. Louis University, Missouri 

Washington University, Missouri 

Lrury College, Missouri 

Central Wesleyan College, Missouri 

University of Montana 

Bellevue College, Nebraska ... 

Union College, Nebraska 

Doane College, Nebraska 

University of Nebraska 

New Hampshire College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. 

College of St. Elizabeth, New Jersey 

Upsala College, New Jersey 

University of New Mexico 

New York State College for Teachers 

Alfred University, New York 

St. Stephens College, New York 

Wells Colleges, New York 

St. Lawrence University, New York. . . 

Elmira College, New York 

Hobart College, New York 

College of New Rochelle, New York 



Facultv. 



11 
23 
10 
24 
24 

8 
12 
26 
2S 
26 
24 

6 
29 
10 
2? 
28 
56 
13 
3-5 
49 

8 

9 

IS 
15 
11 
47 
29 



130 
27 
88 

248 
28 
19 

266 



18 

35 
18 

22 
35 
15 
41 
12 
17 
20 
16 
13 
16 
19 
12 
24 
26 
70 
15 
23 
40 
14 
26 
18 
95 
31 
34 
12 
20 
52 
28 
9 
31 
16 
32 
26 
22 



Average 
number of 
teaching 
hours per 
week for 
those hav- 
ing inde- 
pendent 
charge of 
classes. 



17 
15 
17 
15 
14 
20 
13 
12 
15 
14 



16 
13 



11 
12 
14 

19 



W 

16 
16 
13 
20 



10 
11 
9 
10 
10 
10 
12 



18 

12 



16 



14 
14 
18 
15 
14 
13 



17 
20 
11 
13 
13 
10 
24 
14 
14 
11 

13 
17 
13 
14 



Number 
teaching 
more than 
15 credit 
hours a 
week 



5 
3 
2 
7 
3 
11 

6 



4 





10 

1 

8 


1 
5 
9 
6 
4 

12 
5 

25 
4 



77642°— 18- 



; 



66 RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 

Table 8. — Faculty — Number of teaching hours, 1915-16 — Continued. 



Institutions. 



Barnard College, New York 

Columbia University, New York 

College of the' City of New York 

Hunter College of the City of New York. . . ,. 

New York University 

Vassar College, New York 

University of Rochester, New York 

Union University, New York 

University of North Carolina 

Davidson College, North Carolina 

Trinity College, North Carolina 

Elon Gollege, North Carolina 

Guilford College, North Carolina 

Shaw University (colored), North Carolina 

Weaver College, North Carolina 

Salem Academy and College, North Carolina 

University of North Dakota 

Municipal University of Akron, Ohio 

Ohio University , 

Baldwin- Wallace College, Ohio. 

Bluffton College, Ohio 

Cedarville College, Ohio. . ., 

University of Cincinnati, Ohio 

Western Reserve University, Ohio 

Capital University, Ohio 

St. Mary College, Ohio 

Defiance College, Ohio .' 

Ohio Wesleyan University 

Kenyon College, Ohio 

Marietta College, Ohio 

Muskingum College, Ohio 

Miami University, Ohio 

Oxford College for Women, Ohio 

Western College for Women, Ohio 

Lake Erie College, Ohio 

Rio Grande College, Ohio 

Otterbein University, Ohio 

College of Wooster, Ohio 

Methodist University of Oklahoma 

Kingfisher College, Oklahoma 

University of Oklahoma 

Albany College, Oregon 

Pacific University, Oregon 

McMinnville College, Oregon 

Pacific College, Oregon , 

Reed College, Oregon 

Willamette University, Oregon 

Moravian College, Pennsylvania 

Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania 

Beaver College, Pennsylvania 

Wilson College, Pennsylvania 

Lafayette College, Pennsylvania 

Pennsylvania College 

Haverford College, Pennsylvania 

Franklin and Marshall College, Pennsylvania 

Lincoln University (colored), Pennsylvania 

Allegheny College, Pennsylvania 

Irving Female College, Pennsylvania 

Albright College. Pennsylvania 

Westminster College, Pennsylvania 

Drexel Institute, Pennsylvania 

University of Pennsylvania 

Susquehanna University, Pennsylvania 

Pennsylvania State College 

Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania 

Washington and Jefferson College, Pennsylvania . 

Waynesburg College, Pennsylvania 

College of Charleston, South Carolina 

Columbia College, South Carolina 

University of South Carolina 

Furman University, South Carolina 

Converse College, South Carolina 

Wofford College, South Carolina 



Faculty. 



Average 
number of 
teaching 
hours per 
week for 
those hav- 
ing inde- 
pendent 
charge of 
classes. 



133 

142 

118 
47 

112 
45 
40 
52 
13 
28 
27 
17 
29 
8 
35 
55 
21 
36 
19 
16 
7 

236 
79 
14 
16 
16 
59 
14 
18 
38 
31 
19 
32 
21 
10 
17 
32 
9 
9 
63 
13 
20 
16 
10 
19 
13 
8 
43 
8 
24 
50' 
26 
25 
16 
13 
25 
19 
10 
20 
69 

154 
23 
93 
39 
32 
11 
8 
21 
32 
11 
13 
13 



12 
16 



Number 
teaching 
more than 
15 credit 
hours a 
week. 



16 
14 
22 
19 
14 
12 
13 
22 
20 



18 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OP COLLEGES. 67 

Table 8. — Faculty — Number of teaching hours, 1915-16 — Continued. 



Institutions. 



University of South Dakota 

King College, Tennessee 

University of Chattanooga, Tennessee 

Tusculum College, Tennessee 

Knoxville College (colored), Tennessee 

Milligan College, Tennessee 

Tennessee College 

George Peabody College for Teachers, Tennessee 

Fisk University (colored), Tennessee 

Vanderbilt University, Tennessee 

University of the South, Tennessee 

University of Texas 

Howard Payne College, Texas 

Rice Institute, Texas 

Austin College, Texas 

Baylor University, Texas 

University of Utah 

Middlebury College, Vermont 

St. Michael's College, Vermont 

Bridgewater College, Virginia 

University of Virginia 

Roanoke Institute, Virginia 

Emory and Henry College, Virginia 

Hampden-Sidney College, Virginia 

Holliris College, Virginia 

Washington and Lee University, Virginia 

Randolph-Macon Woman's College, Virginia 

Richmond College, Virginia 

Virginia Union University (colored) 

College of William and Mary, Virginia 

University of Washington 

Spokane College, Washington 

Davis and Elklns College, West Virginia 

Lawrence College, Wisconsin 

Beloit College, Wisconsin 

University of Wisconsin 

Milton College, Wisconsin 

Concordia College, Wisconsin 

Milwaukee-Downer College, Wisconsin 

Mission House, Wisconsin 

Campion College, Wisconsin 

Ripon College, Wisconsin 

St. Clair College and Academy, Wisconsin 



Faculty. 



36 

8 

9 

11 

8 

10 

6 

100 



35 
18 

117 
7 
41 
10 
66 
37 
30 
11 
13 
59 
8 
10 
12 
12 
28 
46 
29 
12 
15 

124 

6 

29 

35 

41 

283 
14 
9 
35 
9 
15 
25 
14 



Average 
number of 
teaching 
hours per 
week for 
those hav- 
ing inde- 
pendent 
charge of 
classes. 



12 



13 



14 
15 
11 
12 

10 
14 
14 
16 
13 
11 
30 
16 
14 



10 
15 

26 
15 
25 
11 



14 



Number 
teaching 
more than 
15 credit 
hours a 
week. 



2 

12 
1 
3 

6 



2 

17 
6 
7 

6 
4 
6 
7 
5 
9 



68 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION AND GRADUATION. 

Requirements VIII and IX. — VIII. Fifteen or sixteen credit hours 
a week for each student for 36 weeks a year for four years should be 
regarded as the normal program of work for students. 

IX. While heretofore 14 units of secondary work has been re- 
garded as the acceptable minimum for admission to college, and at 
the time of the issuance of this inquiry represented the standard 
set by most standardizing agencies, there is now a general tendency 
to raise this requirement to 15 units. A college of arts and sciences 
should require 15 units for unconditional admission. In judging the 
reports of colleges appearing in this study, however, the prevailing 
standard of 1915 should be taken into account. 

Table 9. — Requirements for admission and graduation, 1915-16. 



Institutions. 



University of Alabama 

University of Arizona 

Central College, Arkansas 

Hendrix College, Arkansas 

Pomona College, California 

Occidental College, California 

Mills College, California 

University of Redlands, California- 
University of Santa Clara, Cali- 
fornia 

Leland Stanford Junior Univer- 
sity, California 

University of Colorado 

Colorado College 

University of Denver, Colorado. . . 

Trinity College, Connecticut 

Yale University, Connecticut 

Gallaudet College, District of 
Columbia 

George Washington University, 
District of Columbia 

Howard University (colored), 
District of Columbia 

University of Florida ■ 

Columbia College, Florida 

Florida State College for Women. 

University of Georgia 

Atlanta University (colored), 
Georgia 

Cox College, Georgia 

North Georgia Agricultural Col- 



Agnes Scott College, Georgia 

Piedmont College, Georgia 

Bessie Tift College, Georgia 

Brenau College, Georgia 

Emory University, Georgia 

Shorter College, Georgia 

University of Idaho 

Aurora College, Illinois 

Illinois Wesleyan University 

Blackburn College, Illinois 

De Paul University, Illinois 

Loyola University, Illinois 

James Millikin University, Illi- 
nois 

Knox College, Illinois 



Num- 
ber of 
stand- 
ard 
units 


Num- 
ber of 
semester 

hours 
required 
for 
bache- 
lor's de- 


required 
for ad- 


mission. 






gree. 


14 


120 


15 


127 


14 


65 


15 


120 


15 


126 


15 


124 


15 


124 


15 


120 


16 


178 


15 


120 


15 


122 


15 


120 


15 


124 


144 


120 


14J 


120 


11 


139 


15 


120 


15 


120 


15 


124 


15 


128 


15 


120 


14 


132 


15 


136 


14 


120 


14 




15 


120 


15 


124 


14 


120 


15 


120 


14 


134 


15 


120 


15 


128 


15 


120 


15 


128 


15 


128 


15 


130 


16 


140 


15 


130 


15 


120 



Institutions. 



Num- 
ber of 
stand- 
ard 
units re- 
quired 
for ad- 



Illinois Woman's College 

Lake Forest College, Illinois 

Frances Shimer School, Illinois. . 

Northwestern College, Illinois 

Rockford College, Illinois 

Augustana College, Illinois 

Indiana University 

Wabash College, Indiana 

Earlham College, Indiana 

Franklin College, Indiana 

De Pauw University, Indiana. . . 

Butler College, Indiana 

University of Notre Dame, In- 
diana 

Taylor University, Indiana 

Iowa State Teachers College 

Coe College, Iowa 

Wartburg College, Iowa 

Des Moines College, Iowa 

Drake University, Iowa 

Parsons College, Iowa 

State University of Iowa 

Cornell College, Iowa 

Central University of Iowa 

Morningside College, Iowa 

Buena Vista College, Iowa 

Midland College, Kansas 

College of Emporia, Kansas 

Ottawa University, Kansas 

Kansas Wesleyan University 

Cooper College, Kansas , 

Washburn College, Kansas 

Southwestern College, Kansas. . . 

Ogden College, Kentucky 

Centre College , Kentucky 

Georgetown College, Kentucky. . 

University of Kentucky 

Transylvania College, Kentucky. 

University of Louisville, Ken- 
tucky 

Bethel College, Kentucky 

H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial 
College, Kentucky 

Loyola University, Louisiana 

Bowdoin College, Maine 

Bates College, Maine 

University of Maine 



Num- 
ber of 
semester 

hours 
required 

for 
bache- 
lor's de- 
gree. 



15 
16 
15 
15 
15 
15 
16 
16 
15 
16 
15 
15 

16 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 

16 
15 

15 

15 

14J 

14| 

14J 



120 
124 

0) 
128 
120 
120 
121 
128 
120 
128 
120 
120 

128 
186 
120 
124 



120 
120 
120 
120 
124 
128 
120 
120 
120 
120 
120 
120 
122 
120 
120 
120 
128 
128 
120 
120 

120 
130 

122 
144 
117 
122 
125 



Junior college. 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 69 

Table 9. — Requirements for admission and graduation, 1915-16 — Continued. 



Institutions. 


Num- 
ber of 
stand- 
ard 
units 
required 
for ad- 
mission. 


Num- 
ber of 
semester 

hours 
required 

for 
bache- 
lor's de- 
gree. 


Institutions. 


Num- 
ber of , 
stand- l 
ard 
units 
?equired 
for ad- 
mission. 


Num- 
ber of 
semester 
hours 
required 

for 
bache- 
lor's de- 
gree. 


St. John's College, Maryland 


14 
15 

15 

16 

14 

14 

15 

13i 

14 

15. 

16£ 

15 

15 
15 

15 

15 
15 
16 
15 
15 
15 
15 

15 

15 
16 
14 
14 
14 
15 
15 
15 
15 

15 
15 
16 
15 
15 

16 
15 
15 
16 
15 
15 

15 

15 
15 
15 

15 
15 
141 
144 

15 
15 

16 
15 
14* 
15" 

15 


144 
120 

125 

128 

124 

120 

129 
120 

120 
118 

120 
122 
108 
120 
120 
128 
144 
120 
120 
127 

120 

130 
120 
128 
120 
130 

0) 
132 
124 
140 

( x ) 

120 
136 
120 
124 

128 
122 
128 
160 
• 124 
125 

132 

132 
125 
120 

124 
128 
128 
115 

120 
120 
120 

144 
124 
124 
128 

120 


New York University 


15 
15| 

15 
14 
14 
14 
14 
14 
14 

15 
14 

14 
15 

15 
15 
15 
15 
16 
16 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

15 

17-i 

20~ 

15 

144 

144 

15 

14J 

14J 

15 
15 

13 
16 

15 

14| 

15 

14 
14 

ik 

14* 


126 


Goucher College, Maryland 


Vassar College, New York 


120 


Johns Hopkins University, Mary- 
land 


University of Rochester, New 
York 


184 


Morgan College (colored), Mary- 
land 


Union University, New York 

University of North Carolina 

Davidson College, North Carolina. 

Trinity College, North Carolina 

Elon College, North Carolina 

Guilford College, North Carolina. . 
Shaw University (colored) North 
Carolina 


138 
120 


"Washington College, Maryland. . . 

Rock Hill College, Maryland 

Hood College, Maryland 


130 
122 

128 


Maryland College for Women . 
Amherst College, Massachusetts. . 
Boston University, Massachusetts 


126 


Harvard University, Massachu- 
setts 


Weaver College, North Carolina. . 

Salem Academy and College, 

North Carolina 


C 1 ) 


Smith College, Massachusetts 


120 


Wheaton College, Massachusetts . . 
Mount Holyoke College, Massa- 


University of North Dakota 

Municipal University of Akron, 
Ohio 


125 
128 


Tufts College, Massachusetts 


Ohio University 


120 


Clark College, Massachusetts 

Alma College* Michigan 


Baldwin- Wallace College, Ohio 

Bluffton College, Ohio 


120 
120 


University of Michigan 


Oedarville College, Ohio 


120 


St. John's University , Minnesota. . 
Augsburg Seminary, Minnesota . . . 
Carleton College, Minnesota 


University of Cincinnati, Ohio 

Western Reserve University, 
Ohio 


124 
124 


Hamline University, Minnesota. . . 


Capital University, Ohio 


140 


Macalester College, Minnesota 


St. Mary College, Ohio 


120 


College of St. Catherine, Minne- 


Defiance College, Ohio 


120 




Kenyon College, Ohio 


120 


Gustavus Adolphus College, Min- 


128 




Marietta College, Ohio 


128 


College of St. Teresa, Minnesota. . . 
Mississippi College 


Muskingum College, Ohio 

Miami Universitv Ohio . . 


128 
128 


Meridian College, Mississippi 

University of Mississippi 


Oxford College for Women, Ohio. . 
Western College for Women, Ohio . 
Lake Erie College, Ohio 


120 
124 


Stephens College, Missouri 


120 


Westminster College, Missouri — 
William Jewell College, Missouri. . 
Park College, Missouri 


Rio Grande College, Ohio 

Otterbein Universitv, Ohio 

College of Wooster, Ohio 


120 
128 
124 


Lindenwood Female College, Mis- 
souri 


Methodist University of Oklahoma 

Kingfisher College, Oklahoma 

Universitv of Oklahoma 


120 
128 


Forest Park College, Missouri 


124 


St. Louis University, Missouri — 


Albany College, Oregon 


120 


Washington University, Missouri. 
Drury College, Missouri. 


Pacific Universitv, Oregon 

McMinnville College, Oregon 

Pacific College, Oregon 


120 
160 


Central Wesleyan College, Mis- 


185 


souri 


Reed College, Oregon. 




University of Montana 


Willamette University, Oregon. . . 
Moravian College, Pennsylvania. . 
Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania 
Beaver College, Pennsylvania. . . . 
Wilson College, Pennsylvania. . . . 
Lafayette College, Pennsylvania.. 
Penns vlvania College 


124 


Bellevue College, Nebraska 

Union College, Nebraska 


120 
120 


Doane College, Nebraska 


120 


University of Nebraska 


120 


New Hampshire College of Agri- 
culture and Mechanic Arts 


130 
128 


College of St. Elizabeth, New 
Jersey 


Havefbrd College, Pennsylvania.. 
Franklin and Marshall College, 
Pennsylvania 


130 




130 


University of New Mexico 


Lincoln" University (colored), 




New York State College for 


120 


Teachers 


Allegheny College, Pennsylvania - 
Irving Female College, Pennsyl- 
vania 


120 


Alfred University, New York 

St. Stephen's College, New York. . 


140 


Wells College, New York 


Albright College, Pennsylvania... 

Westminster College, Pennsylva.- 

nia '. 


134 


St. Lawrence University, New 
York 


120 


Elmira College, New York 

Hobart College, New York 

College of New Rochelle, New 
York 


Drexel Institute, Pennsylvania. . . 

Universitv of Pennsylvania 

Susquehanna University, Penn- 
sylvania 


128 
120 


Columbia University , New York. . 
College of the City of New York.. . . 


Pennsvlvania State College 

Swarthmore College, Pennsylva- 
nia 


136 

124 


Hunter College of the City of New 


Washington and Jefferson Col- 


124 



Junior college. 



70 RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OE COLLEGES, 

Table 9. — Requirements for admission and graduation, 1915-16 — Continued. 



Institutions. 



Num- 
ber of 
stand- 
ard 
units 
required 
for ad- 
mission. 



Waynesburg College, Pennsylva- 
nia 

College of Charleston, South Caro- 
lina 

Columbia College, South Carolina 

University of South Carolina 

Furman University, South Caro- 
lina 

Converse College, South Carolina. 

Woff ord College, South Carolina . . 

University of South Dakota 

King College, Tennessee 

University of Chattanooga, Ten- 
nessee 

Tusculum College, Tennessee 

Knoxville College (colored), Ten- 
nessee 

Milligan College, Tennessee 

Tennessee College 

George Peabody College for Teach- 
ers, Tennessee 

Fisk University (colored), Ten- 
essee 

Vanderbilt University, Tennessee 

^University of the South, Tennessee 

University of Texas 

Howard Payne College, Texas . . . 

Rice Institute, Texas 

Austin College, Texas 

Baylor University, Texas 

University of Utah 

Middlebury College, Vermont . . . 



Num- 
ber of 
semester 

hours 
required 
for 
bache- 
lor's de 
gree. 



15 

14 
14 
11 

12 

144 

14" 

15 

14 

143 
15 



136 
122 



138 

130 
120 
132 
128 
124 

120 

128 



15 


125 


15 


128 


14 


120 


14 


186 


15 


140 


14 


128 


14 


140 


14 


120 


14 


120 


14 




14 


122 


14 


120 


15 


122 


14 


120 



Institutions. 



Num- 
ber of 
stand- 
ard 
units 
required 
for ad- 
mission. 



Num- 
ber of 
semester 

hours 
required 

for 
bache- 
lor's de- 
gree - 



St. Michael's College, Vermont . . 

Bridgewater College, Virginia . . . 

University of Virginia : . . . 

Roanoke Institute, Virginia 

Emory and Henry College, Vir 
ginia 

Hampden-Sidney College, Virginia 

Hollins College, Virginia 

Washington and Lee University, 
Virginia 

Randolph-Macon Woman's Col- 
lege, Virginia 

Richmond College, Virginia- 

Virginia Union College (colored). 

College of William and Mary, Vir- 
ginia 

University of Washington 

Spokane College, Washington 

Davis and Elkins College, West 
Virginia 

Lawrence College, Wisconsin 

Beloit College, Wisconsin 

University of Wisconsin 

Milton College, Wisconsin 

Concordia College, Wisconsin 

Milwaukee- Downer College, Wis- 
consin 

Mission House, Wisconsin 

Campion College, Wisconsin 

Ripon College, Wisconsin 

St. Clara College and Academy, 
Wisconsin 



15 
14 
14 

15 

14 
14 
14 

14 

15 
15 

15 

14 
15 
16 

14 
15 
15 
14 
15 



104 
140 
120 



( l ) 



128 
120 
120 

126 

120 
120 
160 



15 
15 
16 
15 

15 



0) 



120 
120 



C 1 ) 



128 
128 
120 
120 
128 



201 
150 
142 
124 

120 



1 Junior college. 

MAINTENANCE OF LIBRARY AND LABORATORIES. 

Suggested Requirement XIII. — At least $1,000 a year should be 
expended for the purchase of new books and periodicals for the 
library. Probably two or three times this figure would be needed 
to keep the library in a sound condition. A similar sum should be 
appropriated annually for the purchase of new equipment and appa- 
ratus for scientific laboratories. 

Table 10. — Expenditures for library and laboratories, 1914-15. 



Institutions. 



University of Alabama 

University of Arizona 

Central College, Arkansas 

Hendrix College, Arkansas 

Pomona College, California 

OccidentalCollege, California 

Mills College, California 

University of Redlands, California 

University of Santa Clara, Cali- 
fornia 

Leland Stanford Junior Univer- 
sity, California 

University of Colorado 



Spent 


Spent 


on 


on 


labora- 


libra- 


tories. 


ry. 


$5,670 


$3,318 


44,000 


4,820 


100 


550 


813 


628 


4,594 


4,885 


800 


475 


1,885 


3,536 


466 


836 


13, 887 


57,300 


30,000 


20,800 



Institutions. 



Colorado College 

University of Denver, Colorado. . . 

Trinity College, Connecticut 

Yale University, Connecticut 

Gallaudet College, District of 

Columbia 

George Washington University, 

District of Columbia 

Howard University (colored), 

District of Columbia 

University of Florida 

Columbia College, Florida 

Florida State College for Women. . 



Spent 

on 
labora- 
tories. 



$4,510 



1,365 
114,000 



2,815 

2,732 
1,480 



3,000 



Spent 
on 

libra- 
ry. 



5,489 



3,520 
88,000 



1,273 

4,807 
3,469 



4,800 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OE COLLEGES. Yl 

Table 10. — Expenditures for library and laboratories, 1914-15 — Continued. 



Institutions. 



University of Georgia 

Atlanta University (colored), 
Georgia 

Cqx College, Georgia 

North Georgia Agricultural Col- 
lege 

Agnes Scott College, Georgia 

Piedmont College, Georgia 

Bessie Tift College, Georgia 

Brenau College, Georgia 

Emory University, Georgia 

Shorter College, Georgia 

University of Idaho 

Aurora College, Illinois 

Illinois Wesleyan University 

Blackburn College, Illinois 

DePaul University, Illinois 

Loyola University, Illinois 

James Millikrn University, Illinois 

Knox College, Illinois 

Illinois Woman's College 

Lake Forest College, Illinois 

Frances Shimer School, Illinois. . . 

Northwestern College, Illinois 

Rockford College, Illinois 

Augustana College, Illinois 

Indiana University. . r 

Wabash College, Indiana 

Earlham College, Indiana 

Franklin College, Indiana 

De Pauw University, Indiana 

Butler College, Indiana 

University of Notre Dame, Indi- 
ana 

Taylor University, Indiana 

Iowa State Teachers College 

Coe College, Iowa 

Wartburg College, Iowa 

Des Moines College, Iowa 

Drake University, Iowa 

Parsons College, Iowa 

State University of Iowa 

Cornell College, Iowa 

Central University of Iowa 

Morningside College, Iowa 

Buena Vista College, Iowa 

Midland College, Kansas 

College of Emporia, Kansas 

Ottawa University, Kansas 

Kansas Wesleyan University 

Cooper College", Kansas 

Washburn College, Kansas 

Southwestern College, Kansas 

Ogden College, Kentucky 

Centre College, Kentucky 

Georgetown College, Kentucky. . . 

University of Kentucky 

Transylvania College, Kentucky. . 

University of Louisville, Ken- 
tucky 

Bethel College , Kentucky 

H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial 
College, Louisiana 

Loyola University, Louisiana 

Bowdoin College, Maine 

Bates College, Maine 

University of Maine 

St. Johns College, Maryland 

Goucher College, Maryland 

Johns Hopkins University, Mary- 
land 

Morgan College (colored;, Mary- 
land 

Washington College, Maryland 

Rock Hill College, Maryland 

Hood College, Maryland 

Maryland College for Women 

Amherst College, Massachusetts. . . 
Boston University, Massachusetts 



Spent 

on 
labora- 
tories. 



2,458 

335 
700 

500 

968 
600 
200 



1,240 
10," 326' 



2,500 
500 
305 



1,360 

8,480 

2,700 

6,366 

200 

710 

2,308 

652 

11,206 

2,346 

5,500 

2,364 

3.003 

1^284 

16, 300 

532 

5,369 

1,826 



3,500 

8,060 

1,396 

42,034 

2,934 

398 

2,785 

438 

700 

6,800 

1,033 

800 

500 

1,747 



800 

2,800 

450 



547 

2,656 
122 

2,104 



3,696 
1,708 
18,400 
2,092 
5,060 

161,402 

260 

600 
1,600 
2,867 
1,096 



471 



Spent 
on 

libra- 
ry- 



$7,982 

1,379 

500 



1,296 
700 
800 



1,233 



7,7( 



1,600 

300 

200 

2,300 

443 

1,489 

2,600 

5,625 

225 

1,066 

1,600 

4,321 

29, 105 

2,153 

3,809 

1,625 

5,739 

1,337 

1,600 

350 

13, 500 

2,314 



2,100 
5,500 
1,418 
28,340 
4,500 

200 
2,550 

510 
1,200 
2,061 
1,500 

700 

465 
1,950 



300 

1,000 

500 



876 

1,405 
40 

3,242 



15,303 

2,635 

6,310 

500 

2,897 

25, 236 

415 
600 
500 
895 
936 



1,455 



Institutions. 



Harvard University, Massachu- 
setts 

Smith College, Massachusetts 

Wheaton College, Massachusetts.. 

Mount Holyoke College, Massa- 
chusetts 

Tufts College, Massachusetts 

Clark College, Massachusetts 

Alma College. Michigan 

University of Michigan 

St. Johns University, Minnesota.. 

Augsbury Seminary, Minnesota. . . 

Carleton College, Minnesota 

Hamline Univers ity, Minnesota . . . 

Macalester College, Minnesota 

College of St. Catherine, Minnesota 

Gustavus Adolphus College, Min- 
nesota 

College of St. Teresa, Minnesota... 

Mississippi College 

Meridian College, Mississippi 

University of Mississippi 

Stephens College, Missouri 

Westminster College, Missouri. . .. 

William Jewell College, Missouri.. 

Park College, Missouri 

Linden wood College, Missouri 

Forest ParkC ollege, Missouri 

St. Louis University, Missouri 

Washington University, Missouri. 

Drury College, Missouri 

Central Wesleyan College, Mis- 
souri 

University of Montana 

Bellevue College, Nebraska 

Union College, Nebraska 

Doane College, Nebraska 

University of Nebraska 

New Hampshire College of Agri- 
culture and Mechanic Arts 

College of St. Elizabeth, New Jer- 
sey 

Upsala College, New Jersey 

University of New Mexico 

New York State College for Teach- 
ers 

Alfred University, New York 

St. Stephens College, New York. . . 

Wells College, New York 

St. Lawrence University. New 
York 

Elmira College, New York 

Hobart College, New York 

College of New Rochelle, New 
York 

Barnard College, New York 

Columbia University, New York. . 

College of the City of New York. . . 

Hunter College of the City of New 
York 

New York University 

Vassar College. New York 

University of Rochester, New 
York 

Union University, New York 

University of North Carolina 

Davidson College, North Carolina. 

Trinity College, North Carolina. . . 

Elon College, NorthCarolina 

Guilford College, North Carolina. . 

Shaw University (colored), North 
Carolina 

Weaver College, North Carolina. . . 

Salem Academy and College, 
North Carolina 

University of North Dakota 

Municipal University of Akron, 
Ohio 

Ohio University 



Spent 

on 
labora- 
tories 



110, 024 
2,565 

5,636 



4,300 

1,265 

95,520 



200 
3,825 
2,750 
1,944 
2,740 

700 



18, 000 
695 
617 
2,230 
910 
533 



136, 847 
2,300 

700 

10,355 
550 
295 
600 

37, 000 

1,470 

280 
211 

2,750 

9,600 

4,063 

500 

1,218 



1,096 
3,000 



4,150 
60,444 
26,064 

3,872 
6,470 
2,310 

4,295 
7,282 
10,582 
1,525 
1,443 
1,087 
500 



2,885 
7,288 

6,851 
8,050 



Spent 

on 
1 ibra- 

ry. 



$17,858 
1,160 

6,561 



26, 600 

1,045 

58, 539 



216 
3,282 
3,000 
2,911 
3,000 

955 



6,000 
1,160 

622 
1,974 
1,527 

550 



20,487 
900 

350 
12,669 

700 
1,016 

827 
28,320 

3,400 

650 

87 
3,700 

2,300 

1,952 

750 

7,253 

1,537 

800 
4,200 



2,421 

94, 221 

3,757 

8,570 

4,040 

15,352 

5,958 
4,351 
9,615 
1,700 
2,148 
1,537 
850 



1,191 
9,551 

3,434 
8,000 



72 RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 

Table 10.— Expenditures for library and laboratories, 1914-1 5— Continued. 



Institutions. 



Baldwin-Wallace College, Ohio. . 

Bluffton College, Ohio 

Cedarville College, Ohio 

University of Cincinnati, Ohio 

Western Reserve University, Ohio 

Capital University, Ohio 

St. Mary College, Ohio 

Defiance College, Ohio 

Ohio Wesleyan University 

Kenyon College, Ohio 

Marietta College, Ohio 

Muskingum College, Ohio 

Miami University, Ohio 

Oxford College for Women, Ohio . 

Western College for Women, Ohio. 

Lake Erie College, Ohio 

Rio Grande College, Ohio 

Otterbein University, Ohio 

College of Wooster, Ohio 

Methodist University of Okla- 
homa 

Kingfisher College, Oklahoma 

University of Oklahoma 

Albany College, Oregon 

Pacific University, Oregon 

McMinnville College, Oregon 

Pacific College, Oregon 

Reed College, Oregon 

Willamette University, Oregon.. 

Moravian College, Pennsylvania.. 

BrynMawr College, Pennsylvania 

Beaver College, Pennsylvania 

Wilson College, Pennsylvania 

Lafayette College, Pennsylvania. . 

Pennsylvania College 

Haverford College, Pennsylvania . 

Franklin and Marshall College, 
Pennsylvania 

Lincoln University (colored), 
Pennsylvania 

Allegheny College, Pennsylvania. 

Irving Female College, Pennsyl- 
vania 

Albright College, Pennsylvania. . 

Westminster College, Pennsyl- 
vania 

Drexel Institute, Pennsylvania.. 

University o f Pennsylvania 

Susquehanna University, Penn- 
sylvania 

Pennsylvania State College 

Swarthmore College, Pennsyl- 
vania 

Washington and Jefferson Col- 
lege, Pennsylvania 

Waynesburg College, Pennsyl- 
vania , 

College of Charleston, South Caro- 
lina 

Columbia College, South Caro- 
lina 

University of South Carolina 



Spent 

on 
labora- 
tories. 



5,192 



415 

21, 136 

4,045 

700 



1,066 
4,538 
1,697 
1,168 
400 



405 
1,437 
503 
400 
654 
3,686 

380 

100 

17,006 

613 

615 

1,203 

300 

3,600 

1,890 

685 

11, 881 



261 

10, 100 

5,682 

3,800 

2,800 

500 
8,231 



1,572 
3,121 



5,282 

2,400 
46,900 

6,316 

2,887 



718 
"2,"530' 



Spent 
on 

libra- 
ry. 



1,200 
1,000 
8,711 
8,679 
257 



467 
7,646 
1,209 
2,143 
1,329 
5,496 
1,977 
2,665 
2,734 

250 
2,305 
3,148 

100 

540 

7,406 

1,039 

2,000 

852 

550 

5,800 

535 

250 

21,010 



1,140 
6.443 
1,300 
7,700 

1,200 

400 
2,339 



861 
1,919 



54,323 

2,000 
4,696 

4,670 

2,602 

600 

225 



6,139 



Institutions. 



Furman University, South Caro- 
lina 

Converse College, South Carolina 

Wofford College, South Carolina. 

University of South Dakota 

King College, Tennessee 

University of Chattanooga, Ten- 
nessee 

Tusculum College, Tennessee 

Knoxville College (colored), Ten- 
nessee 

Milligan College, Tennessee 

Tennessee College 

George Peabody College for Teach- 
ers, Tennessee 

Fisk University (colored), Ten- 
nessee 

Vanderbilt University, Tennessee. 

University of the South, Tennes- 
see 

University of Texas 

Howard Payne College, Texas 

Rice Institute, Texas 

Austin College, Texas 

Baylor University, Texas 

University of Utah 

Middlebury College, Vermont..... 

St. Michael's College, Vermont . . . 

Bridge water College, Virginia, 

University of Virginia 

Roanoke Institute, Virginia 

Emory and Henry College, Vir- 
ginia 

Hampden - Sidney College, Vir- 
ginia 

Hollins College, Virginia. 

Washington and Lee University, 
Virginia 

Randolph-Macon Woman's Col- 
lege, Virginia 

Richmond College, Virginia 

Virginia Union University (col- 
ored) 

College of William and Mary, 
Virginia 

University of Washington 

Spokane College, Washington 

Davis and Elkins College, West 
Virginia 

Lawrence College, Wisconsin 

Beloit College, Wisconsin 

University of Wisconsin 

Milton College, Wisconsin 

Concordia College, Wisconsin 

Milwaukee-Downer College, Wis- 
consin 

Mission House, Wisconsin 

Campion College, Wisconsin 

Ripon College, Wisconsin 

St. Clara College and Academy, 
Wisconsin 



Spent 
on 

labora- 
tories. 



$461 

598 

5,960 



500 
1,700 



560 
390 

13, 778 

530 
13,300 

1,641 
15, 400 

3, 000 
37,481 

1,500 

2,884 
37,000 

2,463 



490 
13,915 



683 
500 

1,204 

4,971 
2,172 

250 

853 

62,999 

309 

200 

2,386 

1,996 

39,096 

1,077 

50 

970 



1,343 
1,525 



Spent 
on 

libra- 
ry. 



$1,055 
1,050 
8,000 



1,650 
625 



450 
1,025 

4,000 

958 
5,200 

1,071 
32, 909 
3,000 
8,685 
600 
4,022 
8,410 
3,942 



375 
9,973 



511 
1,500 

3,104 

3,834 
2,180 

600 

1,285 

17, 677 

262 

150 

4,767 

3, 719 

55,933 

968 

225 

1,292 



2,506 
575 



RELATIVE SIZE OF FRESHMAN CLASS. 



The large number of students who leave college during the fresh- 
man and sophomore years, and the small relative size of the upper 
classes, have constituted a serious educational and administrative 
problem for many years. In certain institutions 50 per cent or more 
of all students are members of the freshman class. It is generally 
admitted that this condition is detrimental to institutional tradition, 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



73 



and may affect the scholarly momentum of a college. The status 
with respect to this matter of the colleges reporting is indicated in 
the following table, showing the number of high-school graduates 
entering in 1915 checked against the total collegiate student body: 

Table 11. — Faculty, college students, and number of high school graduates entering in 

1915. 



Institutions. 



University of Alabama 

University of Arizona 

Central College, Arkansas 

Hendrix College, Arkansas 

Pomona College, California 

Occidental College, California 

Mills College, California 

University of Redlands, California 

University of Santa Clara, California 

Leland Stanford Junior University, Cali- 
fornia 

University of Colorado 

Colorado College 

University of Denver, Colorado 

Trinity College, Connecticut 

Yale University, Connecticut 

Gallaudet College, District of Columbia 

George Washington University, District of 
Columbia 

Howard University (colored), District of 
Columbia 

University of Florida 

Columbia College, Florida 

Florida State College for Women 

University of Georgia 

Atlanta University (colored), Georgia 

Cox College, Georgia 

North Georgia Agricultural College 

Agnes Scott College, Georgia 

Piedmont College, Georgia 

Bessie Tift College, Georgia 

Brenau College, Georgia 

Emory University, Georgia 

Shorter College, Georgia 

University of Idaho 

Aurora College, Illinois 

Illinois Wesleyan University 

Blackburn College, Illinois 

De Paul University, Illinois 

Loyola University : Illinois 

James Milhkin University, Illinois . 

Knox College, Illinois 

Illinois Woman's College 

Lake Forest College, Illinois 

Frances Shimer School, Illinois 

Northwestern College, Illinois 

Rockford, College, Illinois 

Augustana College, Illinois 

Indiana University 

Wabash College, Indiana 

Earlham College, Indiana 

Franklin College, Indiana 

De Pauw University, Indiana 

Butler College, Indiana 

University of Notre Dame, Indiana 

Taylor University, Indiana 

Iowa State Teachers College 

Coe College, Iowa 

Wartburg College, Iowa 

Des Moines College, Iowa 

Drake Universitv, Iowa 

Parsons College, Iowa 

State University of Iowa 

Cornell College, Iowa 

Central University of Iowa 

Morningside College, Iowa 

Buena Vista College, Iowa 



Fac- 
ulty. 



24 

28 
18 
13 
45 

22 
34 
20 



145 
76 
35 
31 
25 

104 
16 

38 

25 
17 
20 
21 
31 
17 
11 
14 
28 
16 
25 
16 
16 
12 
40 
12 
18 
12 
20 
18 
39 
26 
16 
20 
18 
12 
28 
14 

233 
21 
34 
18 
37 
20 
80 
26 
98 
43 
9 

12 
31 
12 

148 
31 
17 
19 
10 



Students. 



Men. 



406 

209 



244 

241 

195 



58 

93 

1,644 
402 
173 
270 
235 

1,483 
48 

476 

262 

96 

46 



278 

39 



83 



22 





244 



134 

39 

124 

45 

36 

121 

131 

233 



102 



160 



136 

1,701 

334 

170 

123 

367 

168 

274 

65 

240 

230 

28 

96 

260 

81 

812 

234 

29 

155 

29 



Women, 



141 
55 
25 

299 
138 
187 
119 


556 

448 

354 

310 





30 

263 

71 


47 

153 



16 

102 

1 

299 

23 
166 
198 

160 
223 

32 
119 

27 
324 

205 
208 
176 

92 

33 

91 
217 

61 
968 

202 
131 
378 
249 


49 

1,579 

257 



129 

229 

74 
765 
310 

31 
221 

36 



Total. 



494 
350 

55 
269 
540 
333 
187 
177 

93 

2,200 
850 
527 
580 
235 

1,483 
78 

739 

333 

96 

93 
153 
278 

55 
102 

84 
299 

45 
166 
198 
244 
160 
357 

71 
243 

72 
360 
121 
336 
441 
176 
194 

33 
251 
217 
197 
2,669 
334 
372 
254 
745 
417 
274 
114 
1,819 
487 

28 
225 
489 
155 
1,577 
544 

60 
376 

65 



Number of high school 
graduates entering in 
1915. 



Men. 



109 

65 





109 
69 



30 
19 



188 
67 

115 
85 

320 
15 

96 



51 

5 


75 
2 







70 



58 



23 

HI 

65 

116 


38 


60 


77 



119 
7 

55 
127 

71 
250 

28 



100 



30 
81 
42 
316 
98 

8 
65 

9 



Women. 



16 

35 
16 



120 
60 



170 

125 

133 





11 

48 

16 

2 

74 

2 



1 
132 



67 



165 

93 
93 
85 
41 
15 
49 

110 
30 




4 

58 
120 

94 


15 



100 



44 
42 
24 
300 
106 
12 
90 
13 



Total. 



125 

100 

16 



229 
129 



30 
19 

471 
358 
192 
248 

85 
320 

26 

.144 

100 

51 

\\ 

lb 

4 



132 



70 
19 
70 



125 



188 

111 

158 

209 

85 

79 

15 

109 

110 

107 



119 
11 
113 
247 
165 
250 
43 



200 



74 
123 

66 
616 
204 

20 
155 

22 



74 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



Table 11. — Faculty, college students, and number of high school graduates entering in 

1915 — Continued . 



Institutions. 



Midland College, Kansas 

College of Emporia, Kansas 

Ottawa University; Kansas 

Kansas Wesleyan University 

Cooper College, Kansas 

Washburn College, Kansas 

Southwestern College, Kansas 

Ogden College, Kentucky 

Centre College, Kentucky 

Georgetown College, Kentucky 

University of Kentucky 

Transylvania College, Kentucky 

University of Louisville, Kentucky 

Bethel College, Kentucky 

H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College, 

Louisiana 

Loyola University, Louisiana 

Bowdoin College, Maine 

Bates College, Maine 

University of Maine 

St. John's College, Maryland 

Goucher College, Maryland 

Johns Hopkins University, Maryland 

Morgan College (colored), Maryland 

Washington College, Maryland 

Rock Hill College, Maryland 

Hood College, Maryland 

Maryland College for Women 

Amherst College, Massachusetts 

Boston University, Massachusetts 

Harvard University, Massachusetts 

Smith College, Massachusetts 

Wheaton College, Massachusetts 

Mount Holyoke College, Massachusetts 

Tufts College, Massachusetts , 

Clark College, Massachusetts 

Alma College, Michigan 

University of Michigan 

St. John's University, Minnesota 

Augsburg Seminary, Minnesota , 

Carleton College, Minnesota 

Hamline University, Minnesota 

Macalester College, Minnesota 

College of St. Catherine, Minnesota 

Gustavus Adolphus College, Minnesota 

College of St . Teresa, Minnesota 

Mississippi College 

Meridian College, Mississippi 

University of Mississippi 

Stephens College, Missouri 

Westminister College, Missouri 

William Jewell College, Missouri 

Park College, Missouri 

Lindenwood College, Missouri 

Forest Park College, Missouri 

St. Louis University, Missouri 

Washington University, Missouri 

Drury College, Missouri ■ 

Central Wesleyan College, Missouri 

University of Montana 

Bellevue College, Nebraska 

Union College, Nebraska 

JJoane College, Nebraska 

University of Nebraska 

New Hampshire College of Agriculture and 

Mechanic Arts 

College of St. Elizabeth, New Jersey 

Upsala College, New Jersey 

University of New Mexico 

New York State College for Teachers 

Alfred University, New York 

St. Stephen's College, New York 

Wells College, New York 

St. Lawrence University, New York 

Elmira College, New York 



Fac- 
uity. 



18 
18 
11 
23 
10 
24 
24 

8 
12 
26 
28 
26 
24 

6 

29 
10 
28 
28 
56 
13 
35 
49 
8 
9 
15 
15 
11 
47 
29 



130 
27 
88 
33 
28 
19 

266 
18 
18 
35 
18 
22 
35 
15 
41 
12 
17 
20 
16 
13 
16 
19 
12 
24 
26 
70 
15 
23 
40 
14 
26 
18 
95 

31 
34 
12 
20 
52 
28 
9 
31 
16 
32 



Students. 



Number of high school 
graduates entering in 
1915. 



Men. 



45 

120 

94 

84 

57 

196 

152 

< 50 

147 

157 

162 

163 

129 

30 


45 

400 

284 

185 

100 



195 

27 

82 

40 





422 

104 



Women. 









216 

177 

88 

298 

200 

31 

211 

224 

159 





55 

123 

110 

90 

59 

225 

124 





109 

156 

88 

216 



273 




188 

81 



508 



22 

7 



128 

89 



348 



Total. 



1,725 

206 

783 





90 

1,127 





235 

194 

137 

141 



100 
243 
204 
174 
116 
421 
276 

50 
147 
266 
318 
251 
345 

30 

273 
45 

400 

472 

266 

100 

508 

195 

49 

89 

40 

128 

89 

422 

452 



102 


64 





104 


324 





104 


278 


547 


84 





145 


119 





279 





119 


142 





86 





30 


223 





232 


309 


140 


147 


60 


35 


149 


238 


30 


37 


64 


51 


70 


63 


940 


926 


123 


113 





110 


8 


6 


81 


66 


164 


855 


76 


83 


52 








202 


132 


137 





278 



1,725 
206 
783 
216 
177 
178 
1,425 
200 

31 
446 
418 
296 
141 
166 
104 
324 
382 
631 
145 
119 
279 
261 

86 

30 
223 
541 
287 

95 
387 

67 

115 

133 

1,866 

236 
110 

14 

147 

1,019 

159 

52 
202 
269 
278 



Men. 



15 
53 
43 
31 
15 
73 



15 



62 
62 
16 



21 

123 

102 

57 

24 





Women 





75 



30 



4 

81 

108 

60 


28 




89 
66 
18 
61 
29 
36 
31 
371 

36 



2 

33 

55 

27 

5 



45 





41 

69 



107 





58 

23 



204 



38 
"JL69' 



229 




32 





85 
85 
63 
75 
24 



27 
113 
63 
15 
83 
33 
39 
27 
292 

45 

42 

2 

24 

260 

27 



78 
29 
93 



Total. 



27 
110 
81 
78 
30 
161 



15 



91 



103 

131 

16 

107 

21 

123 

160 
80 
24 

204 



7 
35 
18 



38 
23l 



229 
75 



62 



4 

166 

193 

123 

75 

52 



74 
49 



111 
60 



27 

202 

129 

33 

144 

62 

75 

58 

664 

81 

42 

4 

57 

315 

54 

5 

78 

74 

93 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



75 



Table 11. — Faculty, college students, and number of high school graduates entering in 

1915 — Continued . 



Institutions. 



Hobart College, New York 

College of New Rochelle, New York . .' 

Barnard College, New York 

Columbia University, New York 

College of the City of New York 

Hunter College of the City of New York 

New York University 

Vassar College, New York 

University of Rochester, New York 

Union University, New York 

University of North Carolina 

Davidson College, North Carolina 

Trinity College, North Carolina 

Elon College, North Carolina 

Guilford College, North Carolina 

Shaw University (colored), North Carolina. 

Weaver College, North Carolina 

Salem Academy and College, North Carolina 

University of North Dakota 

Municipal University of Akron, Ohio 

Ohio University 

Baldwin-Wallace College, Ohio 

Bluffton College, Ohio 

Cedarville College, Ohio 

University of Cincinnati, Ohio 

Western Reserve University, Ohio 

Capital University, Ohio 

St. Mary College, Ohio 

Defiance College, Ohio 

Ohio Wesleyan University 

Kenyon College, Ohio 

Marietta College, Ohio 

Muskingum College, Ohio 

Miami Universit y, Ohio 

Oxford College for Women, Ohio 

Western College for Women, Ohio 

Lake Erie College, Ohio 

Rio Grande College. Ohio 

Otterbein University, Ohio 

College of Wooster, Ohio 

Methodist University of Oklahoma 

Kingfisher College, Oklahoma 

University of Oklahoma 

Albany College, Oregon 

Pacific University, Oregon 

McMinnville College, Oregon 

Pacific College, Oregon 

Reed College, Oregon •. 

Willamette University, Oregon 

Moravian College, Pennsylvania 

Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania 

Beaver College, Pennsylvania 

Wilson College, Pennsylvania 

Lafayette College, Pennsylvania 

Pennsylvania College 

Haverford College, Penns3 r lvania . . 

Franklin and Marshall College, Pennsyl- 
vania 

Lincoln University (colored), Pennsylvania. 

Allegheny College, Pennsylvania 

Irving Female College, Pennsylvania. . . 

Albright College, Pennsylvania 

Westminster College, Pennsylvania 

Drexel Institute, Pennsylvania 

University of Pennsylvania 

Susquehanna University, Pennsylvania .... 

Pennsylvania State College 

Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania 

Washington and Jefferson College, Pennsyl- 
vania 

Waynesburg College, Pennsylvania 

College of Charleston, South' Carolina 

Columbia College, South Carolina 



Fac- 
ulty. 



26 
22 
88 
133 
142 
118 
47 
112 
45 
40 
52 
13 
28 
27 
17 
29 
8 
35 
55 
21 
36 
19 
16 
7 
236 
79 
14 
16 
16 
59 
14 
18 
38 
31 
19 
32 
21 
10 
17 
32 
9 
9 
63 
13 
20 
16 
10 
19 
13 
8 
43 
8 
24 
50 
26 
25 

16 
13 
25 
19 
10 
20 
69 
154 
23 
93 
39 

32 

11 

8 

21 



Students. 



Men. 



138 





1,256 

2,229 



278 



306 

521 

544 

357 

428 

199 

84 

88 

27 



166 

143 

401 

136 

52 

35* 

501 

408 

118 

70 

99 

545 

151 

186 

150 

339 







30 

164 

296 

36 

25 

797 

31 

54 

50 

22 

110 

112 

41 







477 

317 

186 

291 
163 
241 

131 
108 
150 
638 
128 
332 
127 

333 
49 



Women. 



98 

193 

694 





,943 



,127 

224 



5 



89 

102 

51 

110 

6 

189 

116 

73 

219 

108 

64 

33 

880 

435 





116 

464 



69 

108 

170 

188 

263 

133 

25 

112 

215 

28 

16 

776 

31 

53 

39 

26 

147 

118 



453 

50 

172 



14 






164 
31 
28 
84 

391 

380 
28 
42 

237 



55 



123 



Total. 



236 

193 

694 

1,256 

2,229 

1,943 

278 

1,127 

530 

521 

549 

357 

517 

301 

135 

198 

33 
189 
282 
216 
620 
244 
116 

68 

1,381 

843 

118 

70 
215 
1,009 
151 
255 
258 
509 
188 
263 
133 

55 
276 
511 

64 

41 
1,573 

62 
107 

89 

48 
257 
230 

41 
453 

50 
172 
477 
331 
186 

291 
163 
405 
31 
159 
192 
541 
1,018 
156 
374 
364 

333 

104 

80 

123 



Number of high school 
graduates entering in 
1915. 



Men. Women. Total. 



57 





357 

546 



62 



101 

175 

146 



85 

2.5 
3 




78 
49 
87 
35 
21 

8 



34 

23 
30 
148 
52 
76 
50 



45 

115 

14 

6 



44 
9 



112 
51 

67 
57 
84 



1.3 
31 
26 



37 

231 

46 



17 

29 





30 

60 

190 





405 



319 

71 











45 

143 



21 

31 



60 

103 

54 



78 
6 
2 



52 



7 

26 

177 



87 
60 
190 
357 
546 
405 
62 
319 
172 
175 
146 



136 

39 

3 



118 
67 

120 
74 
52 
18 



34 
23 
75 
291 
52 
97 
81 



60 

103 

54 



135 

193 

20 



32 
39 
33 
26 



92 
9 



52 



114 
51 

67 

57 

138 



22 

60 

203 



42 
243 
116 



34 
29 
70 



76 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



Table 11. — Faculty, college students, and number of high school graduates entering in 

1915 — Continued. 



Institutions. 



University of South Carolina 

Furman University, South Carolina 

Converse College, South Carolina 

Wofford College, South Carolina 

University of South Dakota 

King College, Tennessee 

University of Chattanooga, Tennessee 

Tusculum College, Tennessee 

Knoxville College (colored), Tennessee 

Milligan College, Tennessee 

Tennessee College 

George Peabody College for Teachers, Ten- 
nessee 

Fisk University (colored), Tennessee 

Vanderbilt University, Tennessee 

University of the South, Tennessee 

University of Texas 

Howard Payne College, Texas 

Rice Institute, Texas 

Austin College, Texas , 

Baylor University, Texas 

University of Utah ■ 

Middlebury College, Vermont 

St. Michael's College, Vermont 

Bridgewater College, Virginia 

University of Virginia 

Roanoke Institute, Virginia 

Emory and Henry College, Virginia 

Hampden-Sidney College, Virginia 

Hollins College, Virginia 

Washington and Lee University, Virginia . . . 
Randolph-Macon Woman's College, Virginia 

Richmond College, Virginia 

Virginia Union University (colored) 

College of William and Mary, Virginia 

University of Washington 

Spokane College, Washington 

Davis and Elkins College, West Virginia 

Lawrence College ? Wisconsin 

Beloit College, Wisconsin 

University oi Wisconsin 

Milton College, Wisconsin 

Concordia College, Wisconsin 

Milwaukee-Downer College, Wisconsin 

Mission-House, Wisconsin 

Campion College, Wisconsin 

Ripon College, Wisconsin 

St. Clara College and Academy, Wisconsin. . 



Fac- 
ulty. 



32 
11 
13 
13 
36 



11 

8 

10 
6 

100 

32 

35 

18 

117 

7 
41 
10 
66 
37 
30 
11 
13 
59 

8 
10 
10 
12 
28 
46 
29 
12 
15 
124 

6 
29 
35 
41 
283 
14 

9 
35 

9 
15 
25 
14 



Students. 



Men. 



323 

205 



324 

150 

60 

108 

45 

26 

98 



413 

95 

260 

160 

882 

65 

264 

108 

243 

764 

187 

20 

42 

523 

31 

176 

118 



369 



268 

62 

178 

813 

2 

34 

294 

246 

1,692 

33 

54 



38 

80 

165 





Women. 



32 


153 


223 


77 
48 
15 
42 
94 

1,099 

84 

72 



811 

49 

119 



268 

838 

156 



30 









106 



624 

117 

7 



1,042 

8 

22 

270 

142 

1,109 

39 



234 

1 



94 

69 



Total. 



355 
205 
153 
324 
373 

60 
185 

93 

41 
140 

94 

1,512 

179 

332 

160 

1,693 

114 

383 

108 

511 

1,602 

343 

20 

72 

523 

31 

176 

118 

106 

369 

624 

385 

69 

178 

1,855 

10 

56 

564 

388 

2,801 

72 

54 

234 

39 

80 

259 

69 



Number of high school 
graduates entering in 
1915. 



Men. Women. Total. 



124 



86 

3G 



18 
131 



275 
21 



36 



67 
4 



151 




38 



116 



77 

22 

50 

243 

2 

10 

131 

115 

507 

14 



11 



10 



14 

27 



237 
19 





45 



241 

45 

6 



364 

6 

10 

121 

43 

320 

15 






96 


96 


4 





4 


18 





18 



135 



88 



26 
22 

48 



32 
158 



512 
40 



36 



117 

4 

19 

151 



38 

45 

116 

241 

122 

28 

50 

607 

8 

20 

252 

158 

827 

29 



30 



EXPENSE OF ADMINISTRATION. 



Uncertainty exists as to the proportion of the annual income which 
may properly be spent for administration. The committee does not 
venture to suggest a standard. It submits the following table, 
however, for the general information of college officers: 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



77 



Table 12. — Income and expenditures for administration, including handling of insti- 
tution' s fund, 1914-15. 



Institutions. 



University of Alabama ... 

University of Arizona 

Central College, Arkansas 

Hendrix College, Arkansas . . . 

Pomona College, California . . . 

Occidental College, California. 

Mills College, California 

University of Redlands, Cali- 
fornia 

University of Santa Clara, Cali- 
fornia 

Leland Stanford Junior Uni- 
versity, California 

University of Colorado 

Colorado College 

University of Denver, Colorado 

Trinity College, Connecticut... 

Yale University, Connecticut.. 

Galladet College, District of 
Columbia 

George Washington Univer- 
sity, District of Columbia... 

Howard University (colored), 
District of Columbia 

University of Florida 

Columbia College, Florida 

Florida State College for 
Women 

University of Georgia 

Atlanta University (colored), 
Georgia 

Cox College, Georgia 

North Georgia Agricultural 
College 

Agnes Scott College, Georgia.. 

Piedmont College, Georgia 

Bessie Tift College, Georgia 

Brenau College, Georgia 

Emory University, Georgia 

Shorter College, Georgia 

University of Idaho 

Aurora College, Illinois 

Illinois Weslevan University.. 

Blackburn College, Illinois 

De Paul University, Illinois . . . 

Loyola Universitv, Illinois 

James Milikin University, Illi- 
nois 

Knox College, Illinois ..'..'..'.'... 

Illinois Woman's College 

Lake Forest College, Illinois... 

Frances Shimer School, Illinois. 

Northwestern College, Illinois. 

Rockford College, Illinois 

Augustana College, Illinois 

Indiana Universitv 

Wabash College, Indiana 

Earlham College, Indiana 

Franklin College, Indiana 

De Pauw University, Indiana . 

Butler College, Indiana 

University of Notre Dame, 
Indiana 

Taylor University, Indiana 

Iowa State Teachers College... 

Coe College. Iowa 

Wartburg College, Iowa 

Des Moines College, Iowa 

Drake Universitv, Iowa 

Parsons College, Iowa 

State University of Iowa 

Cornell College, Iowa 

Central University of Iowa 

Morningside College, Iowa 

Buena Vista College, Iowa 



Income. 



$210,421 
423,021 
29, 193 
39, 966 
347, 133 
50, 727 
80,774 

50, 505 

274,200 

1,235,891 

300,436 

148,887 

140,000 

83,835 

1,777,134 



Expend- 
itures for 
adminis- 
tration. 



220,954 

203,964 
170, 297 



97,885 
286,302 

62,927 
31,000 

38,700 
94,711 
34,719 
56,000 
151,860 



70, 560 
264,867 



49,851 
14,618 
53,434 



96,588 
71, 155 

104,984 

216. 153 
43,823 
40,082 
92, 189 
99,914 

615,000 
57,702 

117,551 
48,253 

127,726 
45,314 



47, 135 

331,865 

63,452 

19, 797 

51, 229 

189,718 

38,217 

'986,513 

132, 079 

18,850 

46,344 

20,072 



$13,075 
9,559 
4,000 
6,847 
17,224 
7,803 
8,268 

16, 178 



44,532 

23,000 

9,890 



10,812 
114,000 



17,141 

15,980 
6,100 
9,576 



12, 628 

6,637 
5,000 

1,500 

8,109 

34,000 

22, 400 

18,873 

2,167 



17, 180 



12, 570 
200 



10, 798 
7,814 

16,021 
5,535 
2,350 
2,3.53 

13,858 
5,052 

33,984 
3,567 

17,000 
6,052 

14,950 
7,583 



1,675 

22,346 

6,800 



3,000 

10,000 

4,718 

28,313 

10,393 

1,500 

6,000 

3,000 



Institutions. 



Midland College, Kansas 

College of Emporia, Kansas 

Ottawa University, Kansas 

Kansas Wesleyan University . . 

Cooper College, Kansas 

Washburn College, Kansas 

Southwestern College, Kansas. 

Ogden College, Kentucky 

Centre College, Kentucky 

Georgetown College, Kentucky. 

University of Kentucky 

Transylvania College, Ken- 
tucky 

University of Louisville, Ken- 
tucky 

Bethel College, Kentucky 

H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial 
College, Louisiana 

Loyola University, Louisiana - 

Bowdoin College, Maine 

Bates College, Maine 

University of Maine 

St. John's College, Maryland.. . 

Goucher College, Maryland 

Johns Hopkins University, 
Maryland 

Morgan College (colored), Mary- 
land 

Washington College , Maryland . 

Rock Hill College, Maryland... 

Hood College, Maryland 

Maryland College for Women. . 

Amherst College .Massachusetts 

Boston University, Massachu- 
setts 

Harvard University, Massa- 
chusetts 

Smith College, Massachusetts . 

Wheaton College .Massachusetts 

Mount Holyoke College,Massa- 
chusetts 

Tufts College, Massachusetts. . 

Clark College, Massachusetts. . 

Alma College, Michigan 

University of Michigan 

St. John's University, Minne- 
sota 

Augsourg Seminary, Minn 

Carieton College, Minnesota.. . 

Hamline University, Minnesota 

Macalester College, Minnesota . 

Collegeof St. Catherine, Minne- 
sota 

Gustavus Adolphus College, 
Minnesota 

College of St. Teresa, Minnesota 

Mississippi College 

Meridian College, Mississippi. . 

University of Mississippi 

Stephens College, Missouri 

Westminster College, Missouri 

William Jewell College, Missouri 

Park College, Missouri 

Lindenwood College, Missouri. 

Forest Park College, Missouri. . 

St. Louis University, Missouri. 

Washington University, Mis- 
souri 

Drury College, Missouri 

Central Wesleyan College, Mis- 
souri 

University of Montana 

Bellevue College, Nebraska 

Union College, Nebraska 

Doane College, Nebraska 



Income. 



$25,000 
36,549 
38,978 
20, 045 
21,453 
78,753 
43,615 
11,018 



41,215 
321,062 

41,270 

79,250 
12,490 

166,936 



151, 563 
89, 809 

364, 042 
53, 000 

212,569 

628,830 

34,213 

62. 795 
26,000 
71,840 

"221," 817 ' 

222,474 

3,019,602 
736, 734 
119, 676 

336,998 

301,955 

85,250 

54, 673 

2,321,241 

71,145 

21,007 

204,584 

63,264 

55. 796 



42,295 
72,500 
60,293 



269,500 
49,000 



84,047 

91, 708 

128,307 



716,471 
54, 084 

24,607 
215,945 
36,155 
66, 159 
45,448 



Expend- 
itures for 
adrninis- 
tration. 



$2,500 

4,135 

3,489 

250 



8,608 
5,792 

12,000 
3,000 
5,900 

11,620 

4,154 

1,360 
1,542 

9,095 



6,850 
9,371 

11,308 
750 

11,520 

20,817 

1,900 

700 

24,000 

1,605 



2,612 

92,683 

37, 058 

8,240 

233,083 



6,680 

2,800 

126,651 



1,500 

13,946 

8,415 

5,846 

8,000 

2,760 



9,000 
4,411 
3,030 
8,016 



550 



17,838 
5,225 

2,000 
16, 925 
7,000 
3,783 
3,742 



78 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



Table 12.— Income and expenditures for administration, including handling of insti- 
tution's fund, 1914-15 — Continued. 



Institutions. 



Income. 



University of Nebraska 

New Hampshire College of Ag- 
riculture and Mechanic Arts. 
College of St. Elizabeth, New 

Jersey 

Upsala College, New Jersey 

University of New Mexico 

New York State College for 

Teachers 

Alfred University, New York.. 
St. Stephen's College, New 

York 

Wells College, New York 

St. Lawrence University, New 

York 

Elmira College, New York 

Hobart College, New York. . . . 
College of New Rochelle, New 

York 

Barnard College, New York. . . 
Columbia University, New 

York 

College of the City of New York. 
Hunter College of the City of 

New York 



New York University 

Vassar College, New York 

University of Rochester, New 

York 

Union University, New York. . 
University of North Carolina . . 
Davidson College, North Caro 

lina 

Trinity College, North Carolina 
Elon College, North Carolina. 
Guilford College, North Caro- 
lina 

Shaw University (colored), 

North Carolina 

Weaver College, North Carolina 
Salem Academy and College, 

North Carolina 

University of North Dakota - . . 
Municipal University of Akron, 

Ohio 

Ohio University 

Baldwin- Wallace College, Ohio 

Bluffton College, Ohio 

Cedar ville College, Ohio 

University of Cincinnati, Ohio. 
Western Reserve University, 

Ohio 

Capital University, Ohio. . . 

St. Mary College, Ohio 

Defiance College, Ohio 

Ohio Wesleyan University... 

Kenyon College, Ohio 

Marietta College, Ohio 

Muskinghum College, Ohio. .. 
Miami University, Ohio. . 
Oxford College for Women, 

Ohio 



$1,368,039 

273, 236 

48, 675 
13, 158 
62,577 

110, 103 
36,307 

48, 592 
146,774 

236,341 
104, 543 
125, 890 

70,289 
262,423 

4,204,937 
526, 108 

550, 124 
630,415 
774, 613 

139, 996 
140, 117 
261, 658 

51, 830 

118, 829 
52, 686 

43,600 

37, 257 



Expend- 
itures for 
adminis- 
tration. 



$106,807 
12,000 



1,210 
800 

5,700 
6,724 

35,000 
10,213 

3,711 



15, 000 



113,367 
268, 947 

65, 833 

419,250 

46, 447 

10,456 

7,708 

867, 985 

438,278 
24, 883 



15,211 

1,407,745 
17,336 

51,390 

1,894 

36, 745 

22,959 
8,692 
9,430 

6,000 

12,498 

3,050 

1,200 



Western College for Women, 
Ohio. 



Lake Erie College, Ohio 

Rio Grande College, Ohio 

Otterbein University, Ohio 
College of Wooster, Ohio. . 
Methodist University of Okla- 
homa 

Kingfisher College, Oklahoma 
University of Oklahoma. 
Albany College, Oregon. ..... 

Pacific University, Oregon.. 
McMinnville College, Oregon 
Pacific College, Oregon ... 
Reed College, Oregon. 



41, 688 
145, 300 
66, 841 
42,929 
50, 016 
328, 734 

53,127 

112,384 

76, 189 

8,200 

59, 196 

210, 004 

14,315 
17, 268 

231, 147 

22, 225 

31, 802 

27, 247 

7, 500 

122,850 



26, 981 

6,949 

13,380 

2,417 



933 

44, 714 



2,200 



2,600 
16, 149 
4,750 
7,000 
5,813 
9,217 

7,438 

8,850 

12,336 

1,000 

3,824 

10,045 

3,215 

511 

35, 306 

3,409 

4,852 
7,020 
3,482 
6,000 



Institutions. 



Income. 



Willamette University, Oregon. 
Moravian College, Pennsylvania 
Bryn Mawr College, Pennsyl- 
vania 

Beaver College, Pennsylvania" 
Wilson College, Pennsylvania. . 
Lafayette College, Pennsyl- 
vania 

Pennsylvania College 

Haverford College, Pennsyl- 
vania 

Franklin and Marshall College', 

Pennsylvania , 

Lincoln University (colored), 

Pennsylvania 

Allegheny College, Pennsyl- 
vania 

Irving Female College, Penn- 
sylvania 

Albright College, Pennsyl"-' 

vania 

Westminster College, Pennsyl'-' 

vania 

Drexel Institute, Pennsylvania 

University of Pennsylvania 

Susquehanna University, Penn- 
sylvania 

Pennsylvania State College 

Swarthmore College, Pennsyl- 
vania 

Washington and Jefferson Col- 
lege, Pennsylvania 

Waynesburg College, Pennsyl- 
vania 

College of Charleston," South" 

Carolina 

University of South Carolina." \ 
Furman University, South 

Carolina 

Columbia College, South Caro- 
lina 

Converse College, South Caro- 
lina 

Wofford College, South "Caro- 
lina 

University of South Dakota"." .' ' 

King College, Tennessee 

University of Chattanooga, 

Tennessee 

Tusculum College, Tennessee. . 
Knoxville College (colored), 

Tennessee 

Milligan College, Tennessee". ' '. ' 

Tennessee College 

George Peabody College "for 

Teachers, Tennessee 

Fisk University (colored), 

Tennessee 

Vanderbilt University" "Ten-" 

nessee 

University of the South," Ten'-' 

nessee 

University of Texas ..."". 

Howard Payne College, Texas. 

Rice Institute, Texas 

Austin College, Texas 

Baylor University, Texas 

University of Utah 

Middlebury College, Vermont . 
St. Michael's College, Vermont. 
Bridge water College, Virginia.. 

University of Virginia 

Roanoke Institute, Virginia. . . 
Emory and Henry College, 

Virginia 

Hampden-Sidney College, Vir- 
ginia 



$39, 080 
33, 402 

280, 562 
24, 667 
65,416 

130,484 
65, 000 

160,588 
47,705 
35, 951 

102,568 

35, 541 

41, 487 

69, 914 

95,138 

1,738,088 

31.600 
941, 309 

227,009 

68, 941 

20, 685 

22, 102 
142, 227 

49, 447 



74,567 

39, 578 
194, 772 



49, 917 
64,011 

41,580 
"52," 536" 
169, 243 

54,242 

268, 292 

131,736 
602, 609 

22, 000 
529, 000 

82, 880 
148, 919 
241,919 
126, 925 

22, 450 

25, 414 
444,315 



53, 254 
25,712 



Expend- 
itures for 
adminis- 
tration. 



$5, 540 



28,653 
3,408 
8,370 

5,070 
6,760 

9,950 

6,631 

1,462 

8, 527 
1,000 
2,200 



599, 735 

4,000 
50,502 

17, 602 

9,900 

2,250 

1,500 
30, 200 



5,458 

3,375 
7,920 



5,500 
4,625 

2,314 
12, 500 
12, 178 

13,328 

8,070 

109,000 

9,838 
31,373 



27,035 



15, 181 

9, 300 

10,965 



33, 241 



2,789 



RESOURCES AND STANDARDS OF COLLEGES. 



79 



Table 12. — Income and expenditures for administration, including handling of insti- 
tution' [ s fund, 1914-15 — Continued. 



Institutions. 



Hollins College, Virginia 

Washington and Lee Univer- 
sity, Virginia 

Randolph-Macon Women's Col- 
lege, Virginia 

Richmond College, Virginia 

Virginia Union University (col- 
ored) 

College of William and Mary, 
Virginia 

University of Washington 

Spokane College, Washington . 

Davis and Elkins College, West 
Virginia 



Income. 



$107,489 
104, 759 
202,900 



38, 113 

53, 550 
564, 804 



16, 600 



Expend- 
itures for 
adminis- 
tration. 



S9, 261 

16,292 

9,737 
9,357 

500 

3, 560 

50, 988 
8,400 

4,089 



Institutions. 



Lawrence College, Wisconsin . . 

Beloit College, Wisconsin 

University of Wisconsin 

Milton College, Wisconsin. 
Concordia College, Wisconsin . . 
Milwaukee - Downer College, 

Wisconsin 

Mission-House, Wisconsin 

Campion College, Wisconsin. . . 

Ripon College, Wisconsin 

St. Clara College and Academy, 

Wisconsin 



Income. 



$110,566 

138, 298 

2, 767, 701 

20, 835 

28, 455 

131, 164 



65, 770 
60, 784 

35, 134 



Expend- 
itures for 
adminis- 
tration. 



$6, 0S2 

15,118 

121, 518 

244 



10, 654 



47, 611 



O 




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